
old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
Well the main tuning slide sure has had work done to it in the past. But look at the 1st and 2nd valve circuits. They are reversed......the 1st valve is a half-step; second valve is full-step. Kinda weird. 

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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
The paddle rack looks quite similar to the one on my Alex- adjusting wheels and all.
Principal tuba, Bel Air Community Band
Old (early 1900s?) Alexander BBb proto-163
1976 Sonora (B&S 101) 4-rotor BBb
1964 Conn 20J/21J BBb (one body, both bells)
~1904 York 3P BBb Helicon
Old Alex Comp.F, in shop
Old (early 1900s?) Alexander BBb proto-163
1976 Sonora (B&S 101) 4-rotor BBb
1964 Conn 20J/21J BBb (one body, both bells)
~1904 York 3P BBb Helicon
Old Alex Comp.F, in shop
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
lowbrassmaniac wrote:If it's indeed maybe a CC horn, that 1st slide is probably a bear, too short and looks like it's stuck. Cool old horn but plays sharper than a butcher knife.
Someone on a previous thread about this horn said that some early German tubas had a half step in the first valve and a whole step in the second valve - basically as if our modern 1st and 2nd valve were swapped. That seems to be the case here.
I once played a 1900s Sandner (or maybe it was a Sander... not Sanders) CC that had a major third length 3rd valve instead of the typical minor third. Eb was played 3rd valve, etc. Interesting systems in these old horns.
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
https://imgur.com/gallery/Hr88y"%20%20target="_blank
The left tuba is nearly the same, though with the standard valve system. It also has that crazy slide, and is a Hüller. According to horn-u-Copia, the left horn is in Eb! Not sure how accurate that is, it looks like c or Bb to me.
The left tuba is nearly the same, though with the standard valve system. It also has that crazy slide, and is a Hüller. According to horn-u-Copia, the left horn is in Eb! Not sure how accurate that is, it looks like c or Bb to me.

A bunch of metal fart noise machines
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
I'll just post that image here directly:

If the horn on the left is an Eb, perhaps it underwent a similar F --> Eb conversion? Or high-low pitch?

If the horn on the left is an Eb, perhaps it underwent a similar F --> Eb conversion? Or high-low pitch?
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
I'm now thinking valve systems weren't standardized yet in early 1900s Germanyarpthark wrote:
Someone on a previous thread about this horn said that some early German tubas had a half step in the first valve and a whole step in the second valve - basically as if our modern 1st and 2nd valve were swapped. That seems to be the case here.
I once played a 1900s Sandner (or maybe it was a Sander... not Sanders) CC that had a major third length 3rd valve instead of the typical minor third. Eb was played 3rd valve, etc. Interesting systems in these old horns.

That would explain the sometimes-odd fingering system on some of these pre-WW2 German/Bohemian/Czech tubas. I have an old pre-WW2 worn-out Bohemian Kaiser BBb tuba with the M3 4th valve (equal to 2&3 combo) instead of the standard P4 (1&3) 4th valve.
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
^ If you think about it, though, 1st valve being a half-step actually seems more logical, as the length gets longer with each passing valve: 1- 2-- 3--- 4----. Who came up with our standard fingering system anyway?
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Re: old dogged-out CC tuba in disguise (methinks...)
The designer of the QWERTY keyboard.