St. Petersburg 209N
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TYA
- bugler

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St. Petersburg 209N
Does anyone know how big this tuba is on a scale with a Willson 3050? Thank you
- bort
- 6 valves

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- Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Re: St. Petersburg 209N
The St. Pete is smaller.
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TYA
- bugler

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Re: St. Petersburg 209N
Is their a huge difference in size or just a small one?
- Douglas
- Low Brass Teacher

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Re: St. Petersburg 209N
The 209N is way smaller. The 3050 would pretty much make any 4/4 tuba look tiny.
Doug Black, D.M.A.
Assistant Professor of Music, Alabama A&M University
Eastman Tuba Artist
Assistant Professor of Music, Alabama A&M University
Eastman Tuba Artist
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TYA
- bugler

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Re: St. Petersburg 209N
How is the 209N as an overall tuba?
- bort
- 6 valves

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- Joined: Wed Sep 22, 2004 11:08 pm
- Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Re: St. Petersburg 209N
I've always found the St. Pete tubas to be decent, especially the newer ones.
They are not great, but not terrible. Never my first choice, but not the last either. But for me, bottom 1/3. For the cash, I'd rather save up and/or wait for a used Miraphone 186 or 188 to come along. But that's just me.
They are not great, but not terrible. Never my first choice, but not the last either. But for me, bottom 1/3. For the cash, I'd rather save up and/or wait for a used Miraphone 186 or 188 to come along. But that's just me.
- csaevig
- lurker

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Re: St. Petersburg 209N
I must say that I have never been a huge fan of St. Petes. However, on a trip to NC a few months back, I stopped by the tuba exchange to meet Vince and try out a couple of the F tubas. While there, I had a chance to play the 209N and was very impressed. The valves were smooth, intonation was better than any other tuba I've played in that price range, and the low range was incredible. My only complaints, the higher range was a little tough to center and it still had that (to me, undesirable) St. Pete sound.
- GC
- 5 valves

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Re: St. Petersburg 209N
I tried one out back in April. It's a small horn, and has a decent but small sound. Intonation was quite good. Construction seemed solid, valves were smooth. Low register was easier than the high. It's not at all a bad horn, but I like horns with a big sound, so I gave it a pass. Quality of construction wasn't an issue; it seemed to be well-built.
JP/Sterling 377 compensating Eb; Warburton "The Grail" T.G.4, RM-9 7.8, Yamaha 66D4; for sale > 1914 Conn Monster Eb (my avatar), ca. 1905 Fillmore Bros 1/4-size Eb, Bach 42B trombone
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tubaforce
- 3 valves

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Re: St. Petersburg 209N
I find the BBb 202's to be great sounding horns, and I love their sound! More like a big throated Miraphone! At under 4 grand with case, I have recommended these to students many times in the past, especially if they just had to have rotors! I have yet to try a 209, but if you want to try one, I'd call TE and see about a test drive! They also have the 186 "Miraclones", and I have tried several of those, with surprisingly positive outcome!
Al.