smyoung wrote:As a testament to the perils of winning a tuba on eBay, my dad won this for a few hundred bucks several years ago, but I'm not sure if he knew fully about its condition. It is in good shape except for a section of tubing that is smashed in that also had a small (but any size is too big!) hole in it. You can see from the pics that it comes after the main tuning slide. Remnants can also be seen of the electrical tape "fix" the previous owner (the case has markings from a middle school, but who knows...) applied to stop the air leak that is quite audible when playing.
Because of this damage, this tuba has rarely been taken out of the closet and has never been played like it could be. Needless to say, I would love to be able to get it back into playable shape and use it.
My guess is that the tubing is beyond repair and should simply be replaced. Does anyone know of if/where I could find a replacement section? There is a repairman where I live that would be able to replace it; I would just need the part. Aside from that, are there any other possibilities for reviving it?
Thank you,
Stephen
A close-up of the section of tubing:
The section in larger context:

If this were my tuba, the answer would be simple: take it to a good shop for a full "econo-rehab" with "playability" as the only criterion. Surely there is more to be done to this tuba than simply replacing one section of tubing - things that will make a *lot* of difference in the quality of sound that comes out the bell.
For a good shop, replacing this section of tubing should be a rather small part of the "make it playable" project - and a relatively small part of the bill.
Let me put it another way - if this is NOT a minor part of a general econo-overhaul, then you haven't taken it to a "good shop". Either their charge for this one item is too big, or their standards regarding what "playable" means are too low.
If you *only* get the part, with no other work done, you incur all of the start-up costs, for very little of the total benefit.
bite the bullet: identify a quality shop near you - take the tuba to them - tell them to "Clean, Lube, and Adjust - make it play, and don't try to make it pretty".
And again - if the shop takes one look at the crushed tubing and says "That will be expensive", pick up your tuba and walk out the door. Either you won't be happy with them, or they won't be happy with you. In the worst case, they might not have any more of a clue about where to get the necessary part(s) than you do. At a good shop, a large part of what you are paying for is "been there, done that, have the box of spare parts".
And finally - regular trips to the shop should be part of your cost of owning the tuba - no matter what condition it is in when you buy it. If you can't afford an econo-rehab that will include fixing this tubing (*almost for free*), then you can't afford the tuba. Do what the last owner did and dump it on eBay.