BTW... if there are any trumpet guys on the board, I had a good look at the new Severinson Trumpet last Saturday and it has conventional tuning slides!
Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
- Dan Schultz
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Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Hey bloke... Hey Rick... I'm confused! Different manufacturers throw these terms around and never give a good explanation. Are 'inversed' and 'reversed' the same thing? Do any tuba manufacturers offer anything other that conventional slides?
BTW... if there are any trumpet guys on the board, I had a good look at the new Severinson Trumpet last Saturday and it has conventional tuning slides!
... I mean slides built just like the student Bundy and Bach trumpets.
BTW... if there are any trumpet guys on the board, I had a good look at the new Severinson Trumpet last Saturday and it has conventional tuning slides!
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
- Rick Denney
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Some main tuning slides have a dual bore and only fit one way, if that's what you mean. And many have a water keys that dictate how they go. My Yamaha 621 has a dual bore tuning slide, but the slide on the Miraphone can go in either way. Some slides also have offset ferrules and can only go in one way. The upper fourth slide on the Holton is that way. And some slides have chamfered inside edges on the leading edge of the slide, and should only be installed so that the air flows into the chamfered end and not out of it. That's a favorite trick of Matt Walters to help balance the response of different valve branches a little bit.TubaTinker wrote:Hey bloke... Hey Rick... I'm confused! Different manufacturers throw these terms around and never give a good explanation. Are 'inversed' and 'reversed' the same thing? Do any tuba manufacturers offer anything other that conventional slides?
I've always thought that "invert" means you take something and turn it upside down, while "reverse" means you turn it back to front. So, I might pull a slide and invert it to drain the water, and reinstall it in the reversed position by mistake.
Rick "not sure if he answered the question" Denney
- Dan Schultz
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Well... kinda. The 'dual bore' could mean the main tuning slide on a Conn 14i baritone. What I'm talking about is the configuration where the smaller tube goes inside the larger in the direction of the sound path. The result is a tuning slide with an 'inner' tube and an 'outer' tube. What's that called?Rick Denney wrote:Some main tuning slides have a dual bore and only fit one way, if that's what you mean.TubaTinker wrote:Hey bloke... Hey Rick... I'm confused!
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
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Tom
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- Rick Denney
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Oh, I get what you mean. The upstream slide is male on the instrument and female on the slide, while the downstream slide is male on the slide and female on the instrument. That way, the air flow never faces into the edge of the slide tube.TubaTinker wrote:Well... kinda. The 'dual bore' could mean the main tuning slide on a Conn 14i baritone. What I'm talking about is the configuration where the smaller tube goes inside the larger in the direction of the sound path. The result is a tuning slide with an 'inner' tube and an 'outer' tube. What's that called?
I don't think either "inverted" or "reversed" describes such a slide. "Directional" would be my choice. I've never seen one on a tuba, but someone else said the 2000 has one. I can hear the ad copy now..."The open-blowing directional-flow tuning slide on the Rick-o-phone means will make you sound like Arnold Jacobs even though you play like Rick Denney."
Rick "who doesn't know of a standard term for that" Denney
- Art Hovey
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I think what you are describing is like the main tuning slide on most tenor trombones, except Bach. The idea is for the air to encounter a small increase in bore as it enters the first part of the slide and another small increase as it leaves. This is good because it approximates what the air would encounter in a continuously tapered tube. (In a conventional tuning slide the air encounters a decrease in bore size as it enters the first piece of slide tubing.) It seems like a good idea, and I have incorporated it into three of my own project horns. But it does make the bracing less solid. Also, Bach trombones seem to do very well making their slides the old-fashioned way.
- roweenie
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Reviving this thread.....sort of
Question: are there any advantages to having a main tuning slide where the small side (going into the bottom of the 4th valve) is reversed, meaning the outer tube is part of the crook, and the inner slide is attached permanently to the valve set?
There are some who believe that this location is an area where some "mischief" can occur, and that the fixed inner slide (providing a consistent bore size, regardless of the position of the MTS) can improve some of this.
Any empirical evidence (not necessarily opinions, although that would be interesting, too) would be greatly appreciated....
Question: are there any advantages to having a main tuning slide where the small side (going into the bottom of the 4th valve) is reversed, meaning the outer tube is part of the crook, and the inner slide is attached permanently to the valve set?
There are some who believe that this location is an area where some "mischief" can occur, and that the fixed inner slide (providing a consistent bore size, regardless of the position of the MTS) can improve some of this.
Any empirical evidence (not necessarily opinions, although that would be interesting, too) would be greatly appreciated....
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
- windshieldbug
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
roweenie wrote:Question: are there any advantages to having a main tuning slide where the small side (going into the bottom of the 4th valve) is reversed, meaning the outer tube is part of the crook, and the inner slide is attached permanently to the valve set
Since you've already put the tuning slide past the valves, any gap in the slide due to position is not moved very far. Surely the disruption on airflow and/or wave generation of even an open valve (piston OR rotary) would have more effect on playing, yet we still do...
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
roweenie wrote:Question: are there any advantages to having a main tuning slide where the small side (going into the bottom of the 4th valve) is reversed, meaning the outer tube is part of the crook, and the inner slide is attached permanently to the valve set
Since you've already put the tuning slide past the valves, any gap in the slide due to position is not moved very far. Surely the disruption on airflow and/or wave generation of even an open valve (piston OR rotary) would have more effect on playing, yet we still do...
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
- roweenie
- pro musician

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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Yes, all that is true, but theoretically, there is something specific about this particular spot (exiting the 4th valve into the MTS) where a gap in the bore can make for trouble.
I've got a horn where I need to change the length of the MTS, so I'm debating the pros and cons of doing this before I tear into it....
I've got a horn where I need to change the length of the MTS, so I'm debating the pros and cons of doing this before I tear into it....
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
- pjv
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
You could write to Miraphone and ask them what they think. They applied this to their 1291. I'd think they'd have a reason for this.
- Dan Schultz
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Yes, they did. And it left one side of the tubing poorly braced. That's my only complaint about reversed slides.pjv wrote:You could write to Miraphone and ask them what they think. They applied this to their 1291. I'd think they'd have a reason for this.
Dan Schultz
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
"The Village Tinker"
http://www.thevillagetinker.com" target="_blank
Current 'stable'... Rudolf Meinl 5/4, Marzan (by Willson) euph, King 2341, Alphorn, and other strange stuff.
- roweenie
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
I agree, Dan - unfortunately, I think that since the fixed tube is an inner slide, inadequate bracing is unavoidable.
Actually, it's for this very reason that I'm hesitant to modify it this way. If there is no perceptible difference, why bother?
Actually, it's for this very reason that I'm hesitant to modify it this way. If there is no perceptible difference, why bother?
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
- oedipoes
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
The Norwegian Star has the reversed tuning slide setup as well.
Don't know if it makes any difference, can't compare, it came like that ...
You could ask Baadsvik, probably they tested difference versions during the development at Miraphone ...
Don't know if it makes any difference, can't compare, it came like that ...
You could ask Baadsvik, probably they tested difference versions during the development at Miraphone ...
- pjv
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
So again we arrive at Miraphone. A company with big reputation made this decision. You could ask them why and you might get an answer you can use.
For the record: I own a 1291. I wasn't looking to buy a 1291 but it was dirt cheep and in great condition (outside of some dents). The tuning slide was perfectly aligned (even though the previous owner had never brought it to a repairman) and I cn't say I feel the tuning slide is unaptly braced. I am also not a repairman.
On the other hand I'm also not a high school student who vents his frustrations out on the tuba so I'm not expecting any problems (even though I almost exclusively transport my tubas in gig bags).
Good luck.
For the record: I own a 1291. I wasn't looking to buy a 1291 but it was dirt cheep and in great condition (outside of some dents). The tuning slide was perfectly aligned (even though the previous owner had never brought it to a repairman) and I cn't say I feel the tuning slide is unaptly braced. I am also not a repairman.
On the other hand I'm also not a high school student who vents his frustrations out on the tuba so I'm not expecting any problems (even though I almost exclusively transport my tubas in gig bags).
Good luck.
- gwwilk
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
My Miraphone 191 has a half-reversed tuning slide with a male tube extending from the fourth valve and a male tube extending from the slide into the remainder of the bugle. When oiling the rotors with the tuba on its bell this prevents slide grease from being dissolved and carried into the rotary valves. Oiling the rotors is a straight shot from the tuning slide whereas using the leadpipe would tend to carry unwanted debris from there down into the valves. My Rudolf-Meinl Bayreuth has a removable leadpipe which makes oiling the rotors from the top incredibly easy.
- roweenie
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Well, I decided to take the plunge and change the MTS on this E flat tuba to a reverse one:


And, while I was at it, I also made the 5th valve removable (it was in a difficult spot for servicing):

The verdict is that I do perceive a slight difference in low note response, especially below the low B flat. So, there may be actually something to it (YMMV)....


And, while I was at it, I also made the 5th valve removable (it was in a difficult spot for servicing):

The verdict is that I do perceive a slight difference in low note response, especially below the low B flat. So, there may be actually something to it (YMMV)....
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
- PaulMaybery
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Re: Inversed/Reversed Tuning Slides
Love the creative engineering.
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Mack Euphonium
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Wessex 4/4 F "Berg"
Wessex Cimbasso F
Mack Euphonium
Mack Bass Trombone
Conn 5V Double Bell Euphonium (casually for sale to an interested party)
