Greetings,
In two weeks I'll be playing my sousaphone with our church carolers, walking around in the cold. Thinking a plastic mouthpiece might be a good idea, I looked at the Kelly web page. There I found their 3 for $33 special, available in any color you want as long it's white (apologies to Henry Ford). For $11 per mouthpiece I'm willing to experiment.
Right now I use a Conn #2, and have "in a box, somewhere..." my old Bach 24W. The Kelly tuba selection includes 18, 24AW, 25, and "Kellyberg". Which 3 of these would best complement my current mouthpieces? Do any of them replicate what I have?
Thanks for any help,
Perry
mouthpiece variety
- reindeere
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mouthpiece variety
1970 Conn 22K
Bach 24W, Conn #2, Kelly 24AW, Kellyberg, R&S Helleberg, R&S Helleberg II Heavy, Kelly 18
Bach 24W, Conn #2, Kelly 24AW, Kellyberg, R&S Helleberg, R&S Helleberg II Heavy, Kelly 18
- imperialbari
- 6 valves

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- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 3:47 am
Re: mouthpiece variety
If you want to buy 3 samples, then I would take your fairly large instrument and your potential further embouchure development into consideration and buy the 3 largest tuba variants of the regular Kellyberg muthpieces (according to rumour there has been a special run of a copy of the rather large PT-50). That would be:
24AW
18
Kellyberg
Klaus
24AW
18
Kellyberg
Klaus
- Tubaryan12
- 6 valves

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Re: mouthpiece variety
If you are looking to add to your range of mouthpiece sizes, then go with the Kelly 25, Kelly 18 and Kellyberg. If you want to avoid replication, then avoid the Kelly 24aw. It is almost the exact same inside diameter as the Bach 24aw. The Kelly 24aw does have a smaller throat bore so it will be easier to play. The Kelly 25 is a really small mouthpiece (30.78mm inside diameter). My final suggestion: do what Klaus said. 24AW, 18, Kellyberg.
- iiipopes
- Utility Infielder

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Re: mouthpiece variety
From a combination of my playing and hearing others, the 18 sounds better on a Conn with its larger bore, the K-berg sounds better on the King with its smaller bore. I've not played nor heard any of the others.
I use a Kelly 18 outdoors on the 38K when it's cold.
I use a Kelly 18 outdoors on the 38K when it's cold.
Jupiter JTU1110
"Real" Conn 36K
"Real" Conn 36K
- TubaBobH
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Re: mouthpiece variety
Wrap golfers' lead tape around the throat, just beneath the cup, and the vibrations should be eliminated.That's exactly what I did. I played the 18 with a pep band today on a Jupiter Sousa (P.O.S.). The mouthpiece did me well, though. I'll use the 24AW at TubaChristmases this year and play around with the KellyBerg. The lack of mass around the throat tends to make it a little "vibrate-y".
Bob Horuff
King 1241UB
MF-2B / Conn 120s / Kelly 18
If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."
[Kurt Vonnegut]
King 1241UB
MF-2B / Conn 120s / Kelly 18
If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."
[Kurt Vonnegut]
- reindeere
- bugler

- Posts: 21
- Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 11:33 pm
- Location: Westsylvania, USA
Re: mouthpiece variety
Thanks again for all of your recommendations. I think I will go with the 18, 24AW, and Kellyberg as many of you suggested.
Perhaps it's only academic at this point, but I'm curious: several of you either freely interchanged a 24W with a 24AW, or simply misread it. I ask for this reason - way back when (1976, probably) my band director recommended to me that it was time for me to buy my own mouthpiece instead of using a school mouthpiece like I had for the preceding 4 years. He handed me a Vincent Bach catalog, from which I picked the 24AW, noted for its '...sonorous, dark tone quality of enormous volume...'. I paid my $20 and waited for delivery. What arrived was a 24W, not a 24AW, with the explanation that the 24W was better suited to me. Figuring/hoping the Bach guy knew what he was talking about, I played the 24W and stayed with it for the next 9 years. The only difference between the two in the Bach catalog online is medium cup depth for the 24W, and deep cup for the 24AW. Are they really more similar than different?
Perhaps it's only academic at this point, but I'm curious: several of you either freely interchanged a 24W with a 24AW, or simply misread it. I ask for this reason - way back when (1976, probably) my band director recommended to me that it was time for me to buy my own mouthpiece instead of using a school mouthpiece like I had for the preceding 4 years. He handed me a Vincent Bach catalog, from which I picked the 24AW, noted for its '...sonorous, dark tone quality of enormous volume...'. I paid my $20 and waited for delivery. What arrived was a 24W, not a 24AW, with the explanation that the 24W was better suited to me. Figuring/hoping the Bach guy knew what he was talking about, I played the 24W and stayed with it for the next 9 years. The only difference between the two in the Bach catalog online is medium cup depth for the 24W, and deep cup for the 24AW. Are they really more similar than different?
1970 Conn 22K
Bach 24W, Conn #2, Kelly 24AW, Kellyberg, R&S Helleberg, R&S Helleberg II Heavy, Kelly 18
Bach 24W, Conn #2, Kelly 24AW, Kellyberg, R&S Helleberg, R&S Helleberg II Heavy, Kelly 18
- iiipopes
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Re: mouthpiece variety
Aww, he beat me to it. It really does work.TubaBobH wrote:Wrap golfers' lead tape around the throat, just beneath the cup, and the vibrations should be eliminated.
Jupiter JTU1110
"Real" Conn 36K
"Real" Conn 36K
- TubaBobH
- bugler

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- Joined: Tue Nov 20, 2007 6:26 pm
- Location: Houston, TX
Re: mouthpiece variety
Yes, they are similar in as much as the rim shape and inner cup diameter are identical for both the 24AW and 24W. However, the fact that the 24AW has a deep cup and the 24W a medium depth cup makes them quite disimilar in sound output. The 24AW, with its deeper cup, produces a darker, deeper fuller sound than does the 24W....The only difference between the two in the Bach catalog online is medium cup depth for the 24W, and deep cup for the 24AW. Are they really more similar than different?
I honestly do not know what type information you would have/could have provided someone processing Bach mouthpiece orders that would have led them to believe you needed a 24W instead of an 24AW. A 24AW may require a little more breath support and embochure control than an 24W, but certainly nothing a 4th year tuba student could not handle, and certainly not something that could be diagnosed by an order processor at Bach.
Not to sound overly cynical, but it seems to me that since the 24AW is, most likely, a lot more popular than the 24W, they may have been out of AWs and wanted to ship out an over-supply of Ws. I am certainly not implying that any irreparable harm was done, I am just puzzled as to why/how someone at Bach would recommend one mouthpiece over another without hearing you play (strengths and weaknesses), knowing what type of tuba you played, your mouth size, etc...
Last edited by TubaBobH on Mon Dec 01, 2008 4:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Bob Horuff
King 1241UB
MF-2B / Conn 120s / Kelly 18
If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."
[Kurt Vonnegut]
King 1241UB
MF-2B / Conn 120s / Kelly 18
If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
The only proof he needed for the existence of God was music."
[Kurt Vonnegut]