I put money down yesterday on Sam Gnagey's 6/4 CC prototype. After spending the better part of two weeks bouncing between tuba dealers, I can honestly say that this horn blew all of them out of the water in most regards. It has the firepower of a massive horn, but plays more nimbly than most 4/4 tubas. Low, mid and high registers are all solid, and the intonation didn't draw any major complaints either. The tone was big but not splattery or overpowering; I could probably derail a train with it, but I could also play comfortably at a small-ensemble dynamic level. I admit I was dragging my feet with the final sale yesterday simply because I didn't want to put the thing down.
Mr. Gnagey was great about the whole process-- he worked around my schedule for visit times, showed me around his shop and let me honk it out on his various creations, and above all was genuinely interested in my ending up with the right horn, even if it didn't turn out to be his. To anyone in the market or just looking to play some great instruments, head on over to Fort Wayne. You won't be disappointed.
Anyway, I feel obligated as a contributing member of this board to supply you all with a healthy dose of horn dorn.
From my first visit; the horn was significantly shinier the second time around.

The rest are from yesterday.



Sorry about the lousy picture quality. I don't own a digital camera, so my cell phone had to suffice.





