Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
- MartyNeilan
- 6 valves

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Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
What modern horns come closest to the classic Alexander F tubas? IMHO they epitomized the "4/4 F tuba", had a gorgeous timbre, but could still put out a lot of sound when required.
- cambrook
- pro musician

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Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
New Alex F
Rudi Meinl 4/4 F
Rudi Meinl 4/4 F
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Tom
- 5 valves

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Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
Rudy Meinl
Gronitz rotary
Meinl Weston 45 or 46 (not the S)
Meinl Weston Hilgers small
Meinl Weston 2182 small valve (yes, I am aware this is a piston tuba
)
Gronitz rotary
Meinl Weston 45 or 46 (not the S)
Meinl Weston Hilgers small
Meinl Weston 2182 small valve (yes, I am aware this is a piston tuba
The Darling Of The Thirty-Cents-Sharp Low D♭'s.
- Z-Tuba Dude
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Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
Has anyone been able to do a comparison of the NEW Alexanders to the classic, old ones???
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arpthark
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Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
Doesn't the MW 2182 use the dimensions of the Alex F bugle?
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Jonathan Fowler
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Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
The new body Cerveny F is almost directly copied from the Alex 155.
- MartyNeilan
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Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
This looks like it would do the trick...
After the posts above, I now remember them talking about having the Alex F in the crosshairs when this horn was developed.
http://www.dillonmusic.com/p-23088-mein ... 2-s-f.aspx
And I prefer the small piston valveset over the "large piston"
Now, to start a GoFundMe KickStarter account
After the posts above, I now remember them talking about having the Alex F in the crosshairs when this horn was developed.
http://www.dillonmusic.com/p-23088-mein ... 2-s-f.aspx
And I prefer the small piston valveset over the "large piston"
Now, to start a GoFundMe KickStarter account
- MartyNeilan
- 6 valves

- Posts: 4878
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 3:06 am
- Location: Practicing counting rests.
Re: Modern equivalent of the Alexander F?
Good point. The MW is probably very thick on the production horns. Cerveny and Gronitz are probably the thinner modern alternatives, plus whatever Adams could whip up.tuben wrote:Keep in mind the difference in the thickness of the metal and the difference that makes on tonal results IF you are wanting something like an Alexander F.MartyNeilan wrote:This looks like it would do the trick...
After the posts above, I now remember them talking about having the Alex F in the crosshairs when this horn was developed.
http://www.dillonmusic.com/p-23088-mein ... 2-s-f.aspx
And I prefer the small piston valveset over the "large piston"
Now, to start a GoFundMe KickStarter account