Harold is a little direct, but in this case, I agree with him, from a physical point of view.hakster0205 wrote:Can plating a laquered tuba to silver be done to make the plating last longer and does it change the sound. i have a laquered pt-20 rotary valve horn and was wondering if plating the horn in silver would make any difference. i was also wondering about how much this would cost. thanks in advance
But I have heard too many opinions from top pros who I believe are not imagining things who say there is an effect. The problem is, there is no consistency in their reports about what that effect is. It would be impossible to test without a machine making the buzz, because even if we just believe it will make a difference, it will make a difference. And sample variation could easily swallow up any effect. We all know that one tuba is different from the next, even if both are the same make and model and supposedly identical. Those differences will be much greater than the effect of the lacquer. (There is no possible difference between raw brass and silver plate--silver is too much like brass in its mechanical properties and in any case the plating is only a few microns thick. Thus, any difference in going from lacquer to silver is in removing the lacquer.)
In practice, I think the only difference you would immediately notice is that your bank account would have at least $2000 less in it. It's much cheaper to buy silver on a horn in the first place than it is to put it there ex-factory.
Rick "who'd much rather spend that money on lessons, unless you just like the look of silver that much" Denney