http://www.ebay.com/itm/B-S-4-VALVE-ROT ... 3aac33ff78" target="_blank
http://www.ebay.com/itm/B-S-4-VALVE-ROT ... 3aac33f9a9" target="_blank




Heavy_Metal wrote:tubas that got trashed, cause no one cared enough to treat them right.....
http://www.ebay.com/itm/B-S-4-VALVE-ROT ... 3aac33ff78" target="_blank" target="_blank
http://www.ebay.com/itm/B-S-4-VALVE-ROT ... 3aac33f9a9" target="_blank" target="_blank
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The seller's comment about the condition of the valve linkage is quite the understatement:Donn wrote:Seems odd to me. The bell flare on the first one has seen a lot of trouble, but otherwise they don't seem that battered - except for gross injury to the valve linkage, in both. I wouldn't have guessed that it would be a common type of damage.
This type of condition - the valve action ripped off?EMC wrote:A lot of Tubas in this type of condition have been popping up lately, where the hell are they coming from?
+1DP wrote:schools that are replacing them with cheaper chinese garbageEMC wrote:A lot of Tubas in this type of condition have been popping up lately, where the hell are they coming from?
not sure but if I can get one for less than $300 I'll give it a shot.brocktorock wrote:I wonder how difficult a project this might be for a hopeful student repairman?
Good luck. I have no idea, just have a hunch that it's not as bad as it looks.EMC wrote:not sure but if I can get one for less than $300 I'll give it a shot.
The seller is a well-known 'recycler' who canvases schools for surplus instruments. I've purchased many instruments from him. I know the local schools have sold stuff to him. He specializes in 'bulk buys' and the price often isn't much more than scrap.Donn wrote:I wonder what the seller paid for them, or if he's just representing the original owner.
Those early multiple bids can be easily explained. They are just an indication of a 'proxy' bid early in the auction. Initially, they only had a bid of $10. If someone entered a maximum (or proxy) bid of $400... the bid would have increased by whatever the minimum bid was as bidders 'took a shot' at the auction. Yes... I did bid on both of them but know enough about these auctions to know that there is often a heck of a lot more work to be done than just fixing a broken linkage. Without knowing something about the exact condition, those horns were only worth maybe $400 each to me.Donn wrote:Looks like pretty good business - buy a truckload of instruments as scrap, and sell them for decent money..... Looks to me like they both put in bids for both tubas; both wanted the 2nd tuba, but when AQ took that one, 2S went all in for the 1st tuba. But AQ also put in a low bid for the 1st tuba, after the 2nd tuba auction closed. Based on that and 2S's bidding history, they look like fixer-resellers to me.
Probably. I've never figured out the rhyme or reason for some of these auctions. I liked it in days gone by when you could actually see who you were bidding against.Donn wrote:Ah, I think we're talking about different things. ....
Oh yeah. Around here we had a yearly benefit musical instrument auction for years. The adrenalin could really flow when there was a big ticket item getting into serious money, and hands are going up in the air with their auction numbers. There are still auctions here, for restaurant equipment and such, but the musical instrument auction had a kind of special atmosphere for various reasons. One of those experiences I guess we aren't passing on to younger generations.TubaTinker wrote:I liked it in days gone by when you could actually see who you were bidding against.