When a tuba has lots of patches...
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TheGoyWonder
- 4 valves

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When a tuba has lots of patches...
...is it pretty much dead? Is there any reason to believe it will be okay after just this one patch, or is it doomed to become more patch than tuba?
There are a handful of tempting, inexpensive Holton 345's with this one red flag. These seem to be well-cared for and patched due to corrosion, not physical trauma.
There are a handful of tempting, inexpensive Holton 345's with this one red flag. These seem to be well-cared for and patched due to corrosion, not physical trauma.
- Dan Schultz
- TubaTinker

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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
In my opinion... patches due to trauma are more acceptable than those due to rot or brickelyness. In the case of the latter... more patches are to come.
That being said... I have no problem with small patches that are well done. The thing that 'kills' a horn are large patches with heavy amounts of solder under them.
That being said... I have no problem with small patches that are well done. The thing that 'kills' a horn are large patches with heavy amounts of solder under them.
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.
- MartyNeilan
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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
The nearly hundred-year-old bell on my tuba is paper thin. There are several patches on it, and I expect it will eventually need several more as it is heavily used. The bell still has too much resonance without any alterations, and I use split plastic tubing around the rim to limit sympathetic vibration. I may eventually add some half-round brass strips to further limit unwanted vibration. There is always the belt-around-the-bell trick.
- The Big Ben
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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
Almost all restored cars have an amount of bondo or lead in them. One of the standards of that industry is "no more than 1/16" thick". I know of restorers who have been contracted to restore cars such as Austin-Healey 3000s and Jaguar Mark IIs who are amazed when they find out how much lead filler was used by the factory to make the finish acceptable. If a car has rust at the bottom of a quarter panel and some wire mesh is applied to backside of the hole and then is covered with a combination of bondo and fiberglass, I'd call that unacceptable unless that is the only repair the customer can afford or that the repairer knows how to do. The proper repair would be to cut out the panel and weld/braze a new piece in. With modern MIG/TIG welding machines and the availability of patch panels, it might actually be cheaper to do it the right way.bloke wrote:"no leaks" (including mechanical parts) = "a tuba"...at least "for now".
Cars without bondo-repaired wreck-damage and rust tend to sell for more (yes?) than cars with these types of repairs...unless (as sometimes is the case with musical instruments) these sorts of repairs are well-cloaked.
- roweenie
- pro musician

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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
I've played many "well-used" old tubas that play far better than (suspiciously-underused) "factory-fresh" old tubas.
"Even a broken clock is right twice a day".
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TheGoyWonder
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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
Well, sure. But can a tuba be shiny on the outside and bad on the inside? Do Holtons ever crumble from the inside out like a beached whale?
-
tofu
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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
I'm feeling what you think qualifies as restored and what I know are vastly different. What you are talking about is what I'd called patched up cars. I collect and restore from the ground up classic cars from the 1930-1935 time period and sports cars of the 50's-60's. They go to national judged & juried shows and Concours d'Elegance like Pebble Beach. Properly restored vehicles don't have bondo in them. You won't find them at the level of shows I display at. A good restorer/shop would never do it.The Big Ben wrote:Almost all restored cars have an amount of bondo or lead in them. One of the standards of that industry is "no more than 1/16" thick".bloke wrote:"no leaks" (including mechanical parts) = "a tuba"...at least "for now".
Cars without bondo-repaired wreck-damage and rust tend to sell for more (yes?) than cars with these types of repairs...unless (as sometimes is the case with musical instruments) these sorts of repairs are well-cloaked.
Exceptional all original cars do command high values for desirable vehicles. It has always been that way on the motorcycle side, but it has really only been the last 20 years or so that we have seen that on the antique auto side. There are just so few left of old highly desirable & rare vehicles that somebody hasn't touched to some degree.
- Bandmaster
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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
Well, if you have a tech that knows what he is doing, like Dan Oberloh, you can this result.

Lots of patches before....

And none after...
Bottom bow repair...




Lots of patches before....

And none after...
Bottom bow repair...



Dave Schaafsma

1966 Holton 345 | 1955 York-Master | 1939 York 716 | 1940 York 702 | 1968 Besson 226 | 1962 Miraphone 186 | 1967 Olds | 1923 Keefer EEb | 1895 Conn Eb | 1927 Conn 38K | 1919 Martin Helicon

1966 Holton 345 | 1955 York-Master | 1939 York 716 | 1940 York 702 | 1968 Besson 226 | 1962 Miraphone 186 | 1967 Olds | 1923 Keefer EEb | 1895 Conn Eb | 1927 Conn 38K | 1919 Martin Helicon
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EMC
- 4 valves

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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
That's pretty Damn impressive I have to say, probably costs a fortune though.Bandmaster wrote:Well, if you have a tech that knows what he is doing, like Dan Oberloh, you can this result.
Lots of patches before....
And none after...
Bottom bow repair...
- bort
- 6 valves

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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
That doesn't make it less expensive.lost wrote:Looks like that wouldn't be a problem for you.EMC wrote: That's pretty Damn impressive I have to say, probably costs a fortune though.
Besides costs, it also takes a VERY long time and needs a repairman crazy and talented enough to go down that rabbit hole. Results are one thing, cost-benefit is another.
- The Big Ben
- 6 valves

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Re: When a tuba has lots of patches...
And, for the 'never use filler' people in the crowd, there were numerous skim coats of copper on that 345 before the shiny silver was put on.bort wrote:That doesn't make it less expensive.lost wrote:Looks like that wouldn't be a problem for you.EMC wrote: That's pretty Damn impressive I have to say, probably costs a fortune though.![]()
Besides costs, it also takes a VERY long time and needs a repairman crazy and talented enough to go down that rabbit hole. Results are one thing, cost-benefit is another.