" ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
- jacojdm
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
What does this have to do with auditions?
- Kevin Hendrick
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
About as much as it has to do with eBay -- why do you ask?jacojdm wrote:What does this have to do with auditions?
"Don't take life so serious, son. It ain't nohow permanent." -- Pogo (via Walt Kelly)
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
I think that this is a legitimate breakout, and I, for one, am interested. Is a mouthpiece classification by rim shape available?
- bill
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
There are a couple of sources for the dimensions you want. Nothing I have ever seen is complete for ALL mouthpieces but a couple of things will give clues. First, look at http://www.dwerden.com/mouthpieces/tuba.cfm You can click on any mouthpiece rim size and get all of the mouthpieces like it to look at. Many have different cup depths and bores. Second, Josef Klier makes and sells tuba mouthpieces in rigidly programmed increments of cup depth within rim size dimensions. Look at http://www.jk-klier.de/ to see their tuba mouthpiece chart. It is in German but the essential terms are in English and German. They also show "cut away" pictures of the mouthpiece cups.
When I got my M-W 182, I needed to try only two of Klier these mouthpieces to get the right one for orchestral playing and the right one for solo work. Matt Walters, at Dillon, is a source for Josef Klier's "Exclusive" line. From their looks, I suspect Klier and Miraphone mouthpieces are made on the same machines in the same shop.
In my case, I discovered a M-W 182 (and most tubas I own) is really pretty sensitive to bore and cup depth but almost any rim I use seems to work for the horn but maybe not for me. A really telling experiment for me is the Conn 1 mouthpiece I use on my Miraphone 184. It has a 9mm bore and works amazingly well on that horn where a Conn 2, while pretty good, has only an 8.3 mm bore and lacks some of the presence supplied by the Conn 1.
When I got my M-W 182, I needed to try only two of Klier these mouthpieces to get the right one for orchestral playing and the right one for solo work. Matt Walters, at Dillon, is a source for Josef Klier's "Exclusive" line. From their looks, I suspect Klier and Miraphone mouthpieces are made on the same machines in the same shop.
In my case, I discovered a M-W 182 (and most tubas I own) is really pretty sensitive to bore and cup depth but almost any rim I use seems to work for the horn but maybe not for me. A really telling experiment for me is the Conn 1 mouthpiece I use on my Miraphone 184. It has a 9mm bore and works amazingly well on that horn where a Conn 2, while pretty good, has only an 8.3 mm bore and lacks some of the presence supplied by the Conn 1.
Always make a good sound; audiences will forget if you miss a note but making a good sound will get you the next job.
- Kevin Hendrick
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
Well, yes, that makes sense!schlepporello wrote:Because this post was originally in "auditions" until I moved it here.Kevin Hendrick wrote:About as much as it has to do with eBay -- why do you ask?jacojdm wrote:What does this have to do with auditions?


"Don't take life so serious, son. It ain't nohow permanent." -- Pogo (via Walt Kelly)
- cjk
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
This would be easy to do with the LOUD stuff. For example, one could go purchase an LM-7 with its standard rim. The standard rim is:bloke wrote: a few of you: I believe if you approached your rules totally backwards and (maybe...??) tried a different rim with a same-everything-else mouthpiece, you might (??) be surprised at how "at home" the mouthpiece feels, while offering a noticeably different type of resonance.
Model LM-7/LM-6 Rim - BBb or CC Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7.48mm. Inner diameter - 32.6mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
Then also purchase:
Stainless Steel Helleberg Rim - BBb or CC Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7mm. Inner diameter - 32.6mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
Model LM-15 Rim - EEb or F Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7.48mm. Inner diameter - 32.0mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
Model LM-5 Rim - BBb or CC Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7.48mm. Inner diameter - 33.2mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
There's also another rim that fits it, the 26H rim, which is even more like a Laskey rim.
- jonesbrass
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
. . . or just get a Doug Elliott set up.cjk wrote:This would be easy to do with the LOUD stuff. For example, one could go purchase an LM-7 with its standard rim. The standard rim is:bloke wrote: a few of you: I believe if you approached your rules totally backwards and (maybe...??) tried a different rim with a same-everything-else mouthpiece, you might (??) be surprised at how "at home" the mouthpiece feels, while offering a noticeably different type of resonance.
Model LM-7/LM-6 Rim - BBb or CC Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7.48mm. Inner diameter - 32.6mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
Then also purchase:
Stainless Steel Helleberg Rim - BBb or CC Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7mm. Inner diameter - 32.6mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
Model LM-15 Rim - EEb or F Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7.48mm. Inner diameter - 32.0mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
Model LM-5 Rim - BBb or CC Tuba Model
CHARACTERISTICS: Width 7.48mm. Inner diameter - 33.2mm.
FITS: LM-15, LM-7, LM-6, LM-5
There's also another rim that fits it, the 26H rim, which is even more like a Laskey rim.
Willson 3050S CC, Willson 3200S F, B&S PT-10, BMB 6/4 CC, 1922 Conn 86I
Gone but not forgotten:
Cerveny 681, Musica-Steyr F, Miraphone 188, Melton 45, Conn 2J, B&M 5520S CC, Shires Bass Trombone, Cerveny CFB-653-5IMX, St. Petersburg 202N
Gone but not forgotten:
Cerveny 681, Musica-Steyr F, Miraphone 188, Melton 45, Conn 2J, B&M 5520S CC, Shires Bass Trombone, Cerveny CFB-653-5IMX, St. Petersburg 202N
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
THANKS. I have a Conn Helleberg that seems to work best for me. It has no number on it, but I assume it's a 7. I also have several Bachs, and the most comfortable seems to be the 18. However, the dimensions are quite different from those of the Helleberg.
- ken k
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Re: " ' several mouthpieces, but the same rim..."
If your Helleberg is a newer model and has no number on it then it is the larger "standard" Helleberg. the Helleberg 7B is much smaller but still with the similar flat rim and funnel style cup.sailn2ba wrote:THANKS. I have a Conn Helleberg that seems to work best for me. It has no number on it, but I assume it's a 7. I also have several Bachs, and the most comfortable seems to be the 18. However, the dimensions are quite different from those of the Helleberg.
k
PS nice avatar bloke
B&H imperial E flat tuba
Mirafone 187 BBb
1919 Pan American BBb Helicon
1924 Buescher BBb tuba (Dr. Suessaphone)
2009 Mazda Miata
1996 Honda Pacific Coast PC800
Mirafone 187 BBb
1919 Pan American BBb Helicon
1924 Buescher BBb tuba (Dr. Suessaphone)
2009 Mazda Miata
1996 Honda Pacific Coast PC800