1. I should have read Klaus' post a bit more slowly and carefully. I could have simply said, "I agree with Klaus."imperialbari wrote:
[ ... numerous good observations made, see above ....]
2. "I agree with Klaus."
Cheers,

1. I should have read Klaus' post a bit more slowly and carefully. I could have simply said, "I agree with Klaus."imperialbari wrote:
[ ... numerous good observations made, see above ....]

Asked, but not yet answered here. We should just write and ask him I suppose.Steve Inman wrote:quinterbourne wrote:
I guess my only practical question would be: Does Mr. Baer offer a "money back if not delighted guarantee" for his "standard" kits? That would be important to me were I to consider such a product.
No. Finite elements analysis does not live in the frequency domain, but rather analyzes how loads are distributed through structures.Steve Inman wrote:The way to confirm is to find a mechanical engineer with access to software to perform a finite element analysis based on the material properties and physical sizes of the O-ring vs. the felt washer.









Good reading!Uncle Buck wrote:I don't think anyone on this thread has argued that the product does not produce good results. It seems to me that Klaus, Rick, et al. are simply noting the possibility that the product's results are attributable to its valve port alignment, and nothing else.
If the product provides superior alignment, that alone is worth the reasonable price, regardless of whether the other claims are legitimate or voodoo.
A post that came after mine noted the difference in feel at the fingertips. I actually did explain this and certainly did not refute it. Furthermore, I have made changes to my tubas at various times to improve the feel of the valve motion, and I believe that this provides some advantage in my playing, however subtle that might be. I am quite sure it would be too subtle to matter to anyone but me, but I play for my own satisfaction, despite the universal Jacobsean recommendation to "play by sound and not by feel."Uncle Buck wrote:I don't think anyone on this thread has argued that the product does not produce good results. It seems to me that Klaus, Rick, et al. are simply noting the possibility that the product's results are attributable to its valve port alignment, and nothing else.
If the product provides superior alignment, that alone is worth the reasonable price, regardless of whether the other claims are legitimate or voodoo.


Sorry - I should have known better than to try to summarize/simplify a discussion of a topic on which I am not knowledgeable.Rick Denney wrote:A post that came after mine noted the difference in feel at the fingertips. I actually did explain this and certainly did not refute it. Furthermore, I have made changes to my tubas at various times to improve the feel of the valve motion, and I believe that this provides some advantage in my playing, however subtle that might be. I am quite sure it would be too subtle to matter to anyone but me, but I play for my own satisfaction, despite the universal Jacobsean recommendation to "play by sound and not by feel."Uncle Buck wrote:I don't think anyone on this thread has argued that the product does not produce good results. It seems to me that Klaus, Rick, et al. are simply noting the possibility that the product's results are attributable to its valve port alignment, and nothing else.
If the product provides superior alignment, that alone is worth the reasonable price, regardless of whether the other claims are legitimate or voodoo.
Once again, it should be said that Klaus's complaint is not with the product, but rather with some of the words used to explain the potential advantages of the product. My complaint was not even about the words, but rather about the discussion that has developed in the thread, some of which quoted those words and expanded on them. I am not a professional tuba player, but I am a professional engineer, and while I do not presume to tell a high-end performer what they feel or sense (and, in fact, I go to great lengths to avoid that), or even whether that feeling or sensing is important, I do feel qualified to comment on the physics.
I presented the variations in the ports of my Holton to suggest that some tubas, at least, require careful compromise in valve alignments, and that a compromise is the best that can be achieved. While that may undermine the argument that a thousandth of an inch is important or even significant on some instruments, it reinforces the argument that It is wholly advantageous to use an approach that maintains that careful compromise reliably. Were I a professional, I would think nothing of spending a couple of hundred bucks to achieve that, especially in the absence of good alternatives.
Rick "no stranger to the frequency domain" Denney
Yes, I quoted your message, but I was not arguing with it. Rather, I was expanding on it. I really, really don't want to be misunderstood in this thread. You didn't, but others might have.Uncle Buck wrote:Sorry - I should have known better than to try to summarize/simplify a discussion of a topic on which I am not knowledgeable.

The emotions (from others, not from you) seem to be running unusually high on this topic. I'm not sure the motivation for that (although I suspect others have guessed close to the mark), but I've got a PM sitting in my inbox that is certainly nothing I would have ever expected.Rick Denney wrote:Yes, I quoted your message, but I was not arguing with it. Rather, I was expanding on it. I really, really don't want to be misunderstood in this thread. You didn't, but others might have.Uncle Buck wrote:Sorry - I should have known better than to try to summarize/simplify a discussion of a topic on which I am not knowledgeable.
Rick "no offense intended at all" Denney

