What reasons do you have for believing they would have any effect, at all?KiltieTuba wrote:
Specifically, how do harder metals like rhodium, palladium, ruthenium, platinum, and titanium affect the sound?
Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
- sloan
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Kenneth Sloan
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
What reasons do you have for believing that?KiltieTuba wrote:Well, why have a titanium plated mouthpiece or gold plated or silver plated or any type of plating? It surely changes the sound, right?sloan wrote:What reasons do you have for believing they would have any effect, at all?KiltieTuba wrote:
Specifically, how do harder metals like rhodium, palladium, ruthenium, platinum, and titanium affect the sound?
Kenneth Sloan
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
i would think (note the word "think" that they're would be slight differences
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Homerun
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
What reasons do you have for not? 
"Statistical analysis suggests that I am probably in tune with someone."
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Physics.Homerun wrote:What reasons do you have for not?
Kenneth Sloan
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Mouthpiece: thickKiltieTuba wrote:Would you please expand on this?sloan wrote:Physics.Homerun wrote:What reasons do you have for not?
Plating: thin
Difference: negligible
Now...*feel*, and "allergy" and "corrosion"....those are all things that are affected by PLATING. But, resonance? Sorry, no.
Kenneth Sloan
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
bloke wrote:I'll have something for Dr. Sloan to see when he comes here fairly soon.
Is it soup, yet?
Kenneth Sloan
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Posting in this thread.
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Homerun
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Why the different plating options on bells only, specifically trombones?sloan wrote:
Mouthpiece: thick
Plating: thin
Difference: negligible
Now...*feel*, and "allergy" and "corrosion"....those are all things that are affected by PLATING. But, resonance? Sorry, no.
"Statistical analysis suggests that I am probably in tune with someone."
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
That is not different plating options, but bells made from different metals. Gold brass, rose brass and red brass bells are commonly put on trombones to make a difference to the sound to suit the player. A friend who recently bought a Rath custom trombone tried bells made of the different materials and found they did make a real difference in warm, tone and projection of the instrument. Although changing the metal of the whole instrument has the larger effect, changing just the bell will have much of the effect at lower cost.Homerun wrote:Why the different plating options on bells only, specifically trombones?
However, plating is something different - a very very thin coating of another metal over the top for cosmetic, or durability reasons as an alternative to lacquer. Logic would be that plating makes much less difference to the sound than the actual base metal, although must have some effect.
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SousaSaver
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Sloan -sloan wrote: Physics.
Mouthpiece: thick
Plating: thin
Difference: negligible
Now...*feel*, and "allergy" and "corrosion"....those are all things that are affected by PLATING. But, resonance? Sorry, no.
This is music to my ears! Perfect.
I would agree that the thickness in the plating is not enough to make a huge difference in sound when compared to other features that really will change the sound like: Bell shape and flare, overall design, rate of taper, bore size, metal wall thickness, metal composition (non plating related), mouthpiece choice, player aptitude, player physicality and so on. In my opinion, these all have a greater effect than plating.
The real question to ask is why choose one finish over another. I have always liked lacquered instruments for maintenance reasons. Mostly because you can wipe them with a clean cloth diaper and get on with your day.
Silver requires some upkeep, but as long as you wipe your fingerprints off and properly store your horn in a case, it isn't that bad.
Gold is great because it resists corrosion and doesn't tarnish like silver, but gold is prohibitively expensive. It is really hard to pin down cost on gold plate because the price changes with daily market value. Sloan is right that gold is great for mouthpieces for people who have silver allergies.
As far as I know, unless you special order a horn, only St. Petersburg horns come in standard nickel plate. Some people like nickel because it doesn't tarnish like silver, but after a while it becomes dull and if it breaks it will start to flake off. It is for those reasons (and the look) that I personally don't like nickel plated instruments.
This is an interesting question. When you apply critical thinking to it, you realize that in the grand scheme of things the finish has very little effect compared to other factors. Of course that's just my opinion, I could be wrong...
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Homerun
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Ah yes... I knew this and still used a terrible example. But I would think that it would have some effect, just like the difference between lacquered and unlacquered. I can't prove it, and I don't know it, but thats what I think. If you listen close enough, you can even tell the difference between someone playing with the horn in their lap, and someone playing with the horn on a stand.Neptune wrote:That is not different plating options, but bells made from different metals. Gold brass, rose brass and red brass bells are commonly put on trombones to make a difference to the sound to suit the player. A friend who recently bought a Rath custom trombone tried bells made of the different materials and found they did make a real difference in warm, tone and projection of the instrument. Although changing the metal of the whole instrument has the larger effect, changing just the bell will have much of the effect at lower cost.Homerun wrote:Why the different plating options on bells only, specifically trombones?
However, plating is something different - a very very thin coating of another metal over the top for cosmetic, or durability reasons as an alternative to lacquer. Logic would be that plating makes much less difference to the sound than the actual base metal, although must have some effect.
"Statistical analysis suggests that I am probably in tune with someone."
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
The one that you're playing. The rest, apart from any possible sympathetic vibration, will be silent.bloke wrote:I'm going to see which instrument sounds the best.
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
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Homerun
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Maybe I need to quit splitting hairs and go practice... 
"Statistical analysis suggests that I am probably in tune with someone."
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Kory101
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Homerun wrote:If you listen close enough, you can even tell the difference between someone playing with the horn in their lap, and someone playing with the horn on a stand.
+1
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EuphtoTuba
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
I've alaways thought this about instrument/mouthpiece plating.
Silver looks cool on Trumpets and Euphoniums.
Lacquer looks cool on Tubas, and Trombones. French Horns can go either way.
Gold plated mouthpieces feel the best on my face.
That's it.
Silver looks cool on Trumpets and Euphoniums.
Lacquer looks cool on Tubas, and Trombones. French Horns can go either way.
Gold plated mouthpieces feel the best on my face.
That's it.
Luke Sanders
Avon, IN
Besson BE-2052
SM3U/BBIBT
Avon, IN
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Well, and feel implies that there may be physical differences very near the embouchure, hence real potential to affect performance. Still not resonance, and in any case it baffles me why anyone would be interested in the resonance properties of a mouthpiece.sloan wrote: Now...*feel*, and "allergy" and "corrosion"....those are all things that are affected by PLATING. But, resonance? Sorry, no.
Even the tuba itself ... if you rap your knuckle on a tuba, does the sound that comes forth have much to do with the sound you hope to hear from the bell? I don't know, maybe it's of some interest, but hardly the major factor it is with something like a string bass or cello, where the sound is really coming from that wood. Coincidentally, I just happened to be looking at a picture of an Alcoa aluminum string bass this morning. Beautiful instrument, really, but rumor has it, wood is really better for sound. In fact, perhaps carbon fiber is better for sound - not as good as wood, but there seems to be a market for carbon fiber basses - and you can make a tuba bell from carbon fiber, so ...
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
I think the biggest reason they do different platings is for the players. It feels to me like the different plating has more of a placebo affects on the sound. If you were to get a tuba plated in the Cannonball black nickel laquer it probably wouldn't sound any different than a silver nickel plated one unless it gives the player a different sound concept. I feel this also carries over between laquer/gold/silver/etc.KiltieTuba wrote: Surely there must be a reason for doing this? Or is it simply because of looks and cost?
I would be interested as to whether or not a tuba could be made out of wood. I've seen a wooden piccolo trumpet online, so obviously it's been done somewhere. Could such a large scale actually work?
For that matter, why are we stuck on metal for brass instruments? I know that fiberglass is less resonant than brass, but has anyone searched for anything that would increase resonance?
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Actually, some brass wind instrument makers offer any of their bells in raw brass, lacquer, or gold-, sliver-, or copper-plate.Neptune wrote:That is not different plating options, but bells made from different metals. Gold brass, rose brass and red brass bells are commonly put on trombones to make a difference to the sound to suit the player.Homerun wrote:Why the different plating options on bells only, specifically trombones?
And, for what it's worth, Edwards claims that their
finishes create a variety of looks, but more importantly, each has unique playing charactersistics.
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Re: Plating: The Different and unique tonal qualities
Physician, heal thyself.KiltieTuba wrote:
This thread is based on a brass instrument with plating, please stay on topic. To answer you question on resonance, carbon fiber has a more resonant quality than fiberglass and in some cases brass. There's a company that makes CF violins and cellos, and there have been a few examples of CF bells and bottom bows on tubas - Canadian Brass...
Kenneth Sloan