roweenie wrote:Hi everyone,
I'd like to improve the action of this 5th valve lever by shortening the throw by at least 1/3 (right now it seems as though the ratio is 1:1 from the lever to the valve).
Does any of you engineer-types have some ideas or advice on what I need to do? I'm stumped.....
Thanks all,
Bob
Bob,
Please keep in mind I am an engineer, but I am NOT a tuba repair man. This is my opinion:
Shortening the 'throw' at the thumb end of the valve will significantly change the feel unless you also change the spring wrap to loosen the pressure to match.
Assuming you're not going to modify things at the rotor end (that could get tricky), you have 2 real options to change the throw that much:
Option 1 is to extend the length of either the lever connected to the pushrod.
Option 2 is to shorten the length of the finger lever.
Judging from your pictures, I don't think you can lengthen that arm enough to get a 1/3 reduction in throw without significant changes. That leaves changing the finger lever (the one that your thumb pushes). Shortening that will require additional changes to the thumb ring to put you back in position to reach the valve comfortably. It will also make it change feel more through the stroke of the valve.
There are other 'out of the box' options to pursue like completely scrapping the valve pushrod system you have (change to a pullrod?) or adding an intermediate lever on the pushrod system, but I have no idea if either would fit on your horn. Probably best explored by one of the tuba techs here while looking at your horn in person since they're more familiar with the availability of parts to get something like that done. There's not alot of distance from the thumbring to the rotor in your pics, so you may just have what you have (not many ways to change it).
If I really step back though, your question is one based on ergonomics. moving the thumb ring and the valve lever axis to a better position for your hand should make it feel much better without changing the throw distance (ideally it's a 1:1 ratio as described by the guys above).
Best of luck to you with this.