which travel F tuba (?)
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barry grrr-ero
- 4 valves

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which travel F tuba (?)
I'm interested in getting a travel F tuba, but I've noticed that they seem to come with just four valves. Is that because the low notes are near impossible? Or, is it because 'who cares!' about intonation on a travel tuba? Also, which travel F would you recommend. Obviously, I want something that plays well yet doesn't cost like a cimbasso.
If you want to open the conversation to F vs. Bb or C travel tuba, that's fine too. It's all new to me.
Barry 'thanks in advance' Guerrero
If you want to open the conversation to F vs. Bb or C travel tuba, that's fine too. It's all new to me.
Barry 'thanks in advance' Guerrero
- bort
- 6 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
Can you even buy the Chinese ones (new) anymore?
- sousaphone68
- 4 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
I used to own a Bubbie travel F/Eb I would only recommend that style of tuba if you need to practice while traveling.
Either of the two tournister tubas may be of more use.
Either of the two tournister tubas may be of more use.
Cant carry a tune but I can carry a tuba.


- opus37
- 5 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
I own a Wessex travel tuba in F/Eb. I play it regularly in a concert band on the French horn parts. It does a nice job. They do have a lot of back pressure so it is exercise for your lungs. They are not loud so don't plan on supporting a large group. They are great for practicing and are easy to transport. Kind of a concealed carry tuba. I don't think that a 5 or 6 valves version would make much sense. You likely wouldn't need the intonation help and you would want the back pressure or weight gain. You can still buy a Schiller version of these horns. But Mac Brass and Wessex no long sell them. They do come up for sale on the used market from time to time.
The low range is tough because of the back pressure. It can be done but you have to work a bit.
The low range is tough because of the back pressure. It can be done but you have to work a bit.
Brian
1892 Courtiere (J.W. Pepper Import) Helicon Eb
1980's Yamaha 321 euphonium
2007 Miraphone 383 Starlight
2010 Kanstul 66T
2016 Bubbie Mark 5
1892 Courtiere (J.W. Pepper Import) Helicon Eb
1980's Yamaha 321 euphonium
2007 Miraphone 383 Starlight
2010 Kanstul 66T
2016 Bubbie Mark 5
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kathott
- bugler

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
Hi, I have a Meinl Weston "Trolley" F tuba (great name). It is a superbly made instrument, well thought out. The sound and pitch are very good, and the low register is just fine, considering it's size. Yes, a fifth valve might be handy, but it's original purpose (as patiently explained by the company) is to allow a performer to stay in playing condition while travelling. Overall cost and weight were considerations in the production. When I have the opportunity I will have a right thumb 1st valve (vented) trigger installed. I have played this instrument on very rare occasions in concert - Gabrieli and the odd bass trombone part - that is the extent to which the sound can blend into a standard ensemble. It has allowed me to play discreetly in all sorts of strange places, the mute supplied being quite satisfactory. This instrument is very high quality and one pays for this.
Last edited by kathott on Tue Jul 21, 2015 2:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Schmenge Kaiser EEb, 3 valve (two rotors, one piston), with a Kosicup mouthpiece (9.2 mm)
MESSAGES are checked Sundays
MESSAGES are checked Sundays
- bisontuba
- 6 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
There is a used one for sale at Dillon Music-FYI..kathott wrote:Hi, I have a Meinl Weston "Trolley" F tuba (great name). It is a superbly made instrument, well thought out. The sound and pitch are very good, and the low register is just fine, considering it's size. Yes, a fifth valve might be handy, but it's original purpose (as patiently explained by the company) is to allow a performer to stay in playing condition while travelling. Overall cost and weight were considerations in the production. I have played it on rare occasions in concerts - for Gabrieli and the odd bass trombone part - but it is really mostly useful while on the road. It has allowed me to practice discreetly in all sorts of strange places, the mute supplied being quite satisfactory. This instrument is very high quality and one pays for this.
Mark
- Wyvern
- Wessex Tubas

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
When Wessex sold the Bubbie F/Eb travel tuba, five-valves were much requested and I did look into this option, but the factory who made (NOT Jinbao) refused to even try to make a five valve version, and seeing the small, French horn size bore, it probably would not have worked anyway. When Jim Laabs started selling them at uneconomical low price, Wessex ceased selling.barry grrr-ero wrote:I'm interested in getting a travel F tuba, but I've noticed that they seem to come with just four valves. Is that because the low notes are near impossible? Or, is it because 'who cares!' about intonation on a travel tuba? Also, which travel F would you recommend. Obviously, I want something that plays well yet doesn't cost like a cimbasso.
If you want to open the conversation to F vs. Bb or C travel tuba, that's fine too. It's all new to me.
Barry 'thanks in advance' Guerrero
The BBb Mighty Midget and CC Mighty Gnome tornistertuba are very different tubas with nearer euphonium bore and blow and sound a lot more like a real tuba (they amaze people when they try them), while still being small enough to take on aircraft as cabin luggage travelling using the available gig bag.
Wessex has not given up on the F travel tuba and learning from previous experience are busy developing a completely new, much better larger bore version which will have 5-valves. That, the 'Bubbie 5' is already on the drawing board and I expect to have out in 2016
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eupher61
- 6 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
Jonathan, would a screw bell send the price too much higher?
- Wyvern
- Wessex Tubas

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
Are you talking about Mighty Midget? Do contact me direct and I will investigate. In fact as I am currently at factory do quality assurance checking, will discuss with production manager if time.eupher61 wrote:Jonathan, would a screw bell send the price too much higher?
- PaulTkachenko
- 3 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
I find the Bubbie excellent for practice, but useless for anything else.
I use it a lot for practice - yes a fifth valve would be handy.
I've got a tornister too now, but the Bubbie is much smaller and easier to take on the road.
I use it a lot for practice - yes a fifth valve would be handy.
I've got a tornister too now, but the Bubbie is much smaller and easier to take on the road.
Yamahas YFB621, YBB621 & YEB 631
Conn 20K, Bubbie, Tornister & Amati Bb helicon
Perinet ophicleide, Kaiser serpent, YEP 321 Euphonium, King 3B bone, YBL612II bass bone, Meinl flugabone
Double bass, bass guitar, bass sax
Conn 20K, Bubbie, Tornister & Amati Bb helicon
Perinet ophicleide, Kaiser serpent, YEP 321 Euphonium, King 3B bone, YBL612II bass bone, Meinl flugabone
Double bass, bass guitar, bass sax
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eupher61
- 6 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
Jonathan, for whichever. I'm thinking about the MW with the screw bell that leaves no problem with carry on baggage. With arilines getting more and more skittish about things, especially after the carry-on agreement in the US, the less they have to argue about the better. A screw bell would make the Bubbie or the Midget a lot better for that.
- MartyNeilan
- 6 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
I don't like to speak ill of equipment - almost everything has a "time and place."
I had the opportunity to briefly try a Bubbie travel tuba, and found it to be an instrument I would not want to play under almost any circumstances. Is it better than nothing? Probably. But buzzing a mouthpiece, with and without added resistance, may be more effective than developing the bad habits extended attempts at playing that miniature tuba could cause. If the Bubbie was redeveloped with a more appropriate bore, that could make a substantial difference and put it in a league closer to the Meinl Weston travel tuba.
I had the opportunity to briefly try a Bubbie travel tuba, and found it to be an instrument I would not want to play under almost any circumstances. Is it better than nothing? Probably. But buzzing a mouthpiece, with and without added resistance, may be more effective than developing the bad habits extended attempts at playing that miniature tuba could cause. If the Bubbie was redeveloped with a more appropriate bore, that could make a substantial difference and put it in a league closer to the Meinl Weston travel tuba.
- opus37
- 5 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
I bought mine with the intention of just using it as a practice instrument and for travel. Initially, my impression was the same as your's, this has a lot of back pressure and the sound isn't so good. Then I practiced with it for a while. The sound improved dramatically within a week of practice and the back pressure became unnoticeable in about the same time period. (My real tuba sound and endurance has improved too.) I've played it now for a couple of years and found it to be very useful. I play french horn parts in one band (we needed french horns not tubas), in church when they wanted a more trombone sound, band practice when the snow and ice made it easier to carry into practice, some euphonium parts, and to serenade the loons from the dock. A brief try will give you one impression of these horns, but they grow on you. They are not a "carry the band" horn but they do have their places. I want to see what Wessex comes up with, a little large bore might be nice, we'll see......... If it's just a small F that is one thing, having the Eb option has been very useful for me.MartyNeilan wrote:I don't like to speak ill of equipment - almost everything has a "time and place."
I had the opportunity to briefly try a Bubbie travel tuba, and found it to be an instrument I would not want to play under almost any circumstances. Is it better than nothing? Probably. But buzzing a mouthpiece, with and without added resistance, may be more effective than developing the bad habits extended attempts at playing that miniature tuba could cause. If the Bubbie was redeveloped with a more appropriate bore, that could make a substantial difference and put it in a league closer to the Meinl Weston travel tuba.
Brian
1892 Courtiere (J.W. Pepper Import) Helicon Eb
1980's Yamaha 321 euphonium
2007 Miraphone 383 Starlight
2010 Kanstul 66T
2016 Bubbie Mark 5
1892 Courtiere (J.W. Pepper Import) Helicon Eb
1980's Yamaha 321 euphonium
2007 Miraphone 383 Starlight
2010 Kanstul 66T
2016 Bubbie Mark 5
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Bob Kolada
- 6 valves

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Re: which travel F tuba (?)
For me, these things play -much- better with a very small mouthpiece; something contrabone/cimbasso-ish.