Piggy 5th valve
- Dylan King
- YouTube Tubist
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- pro musician
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- pro musician
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It is unusual now, yes. However I have to old Alexander tubas (a CC and an F) that have their fifth valves set up in this maner. The F tuba is a late 50's model, the CC is a late 60's. I have also played a few older Cerveny tubas with this set up. I quite like it, but it is also what I am used to playing right now.
- KarlMarx
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Ta∂ ist standard á het cor simple in Si bemol cum 4 ossia 5 values.sbring wrote:Well, I suppose they how their own tubas are made, but is this not an unusual length for a fifth valve?Brendan Bohnhorst wrote:A 3/4 step valve is a flat half step. Think of it as an other second valve with the slide pulled way out, thats about the right legnth.
Sven
Carolus Shofarimus
- Gorilla Tuba
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Our school's Cerveny has that type of 5th valve (really flat half step). I haven't invested much time into learning its uses. On the rare occasion I play this horn, I only use the 5th valve on low F (245). I can't figure out other uses for it. I am sure it is a valid tuning system or they wouldn't still be using it. I am just not motivated to take the time to learn how to best use it.
If I were in the market for a Cerveny CC (I'm not), I personally would either have the 5th valve tuning slide lengthened to make it a long whole step or opt for the 4 valve version. Most likely the latter would be more realistic since I would purchase the horn solely for quintet where the low refister is not as needed as in orchestral literature.... not that I'm playing much of that these days.
If I were in the market for a Cerveny CC (I'm not), I personally would either have the 5th valve tuning slide lengthened to make it a long whole step or opt for the 4 valve version. Most likely the latter would be more realistic since I would purchase the horn solely for quintet where the low refister is not as needed as in orchestral literature.... not that I'm playing much of that these days.
A. Douglas Whitten
Associate Director of Bands
Assoc. Professor of Tuba & Euphonium
Pittsburg State University
Associate Director of Bands
Assoc. Professor of Tuba & Euphonium
Pittsburg State University
- Art Hovey
- pro musician
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I think a 3/4-tone valve is mainly intended to correct the sharpness of a 123 or 24 fingering, but it can also be useful for a few other notes. See example 1 below for more details:
http://www.geocities.com/galvanized.geo ... valve.html
http://www.geocities.com/galvanized.geo ... valve.html
- Art Hovey
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Perhaps it's a matter of tradition. According to Bevan, the original tuba patented by Wieprecht had a 3/4-tone 5th valve. If you play down the chromatic scale on a 4-valve tuba the first serious intonation problem you encounter is the 123 or 24 combination, so perhaps that is why the 3/4-tone 5th valve was invented. I'm not saying it's the best solution, but it's the oldest and in a way the simplest.