We have a set of 4 Wisemann C900 5/4 piston CC tubas in stock, all in silver plate with gold plated trim. Includes hard case. Tubenet special $5795 plus $250 shipping.

-F
Interesting. This hasn't changed how we do business with DY Music. No, production won't move. Any maker promoting German instruments knows better than to move production to China if they wish to keep the perceived value high.kmorgancraw wrote:Beijing Wind Instruments Manufacture Company Limited is the parent of Beijing Deyong, the parent of Wisemann. Buffet bought Beijing Wind Instruments Manufacture Company Limited.
http://mmrmagazine.com/91-upfront/4366- ... -wind.html" target="_blank" target="_blank
So will the PT-6p be built in China now you think?
Totally makes sense...it's called survival...adapt or perish....bloke wrote:After GM was given B&S (after the fall of the "Iron Curtain") in exchange for keeping it open (at least, this is what I've heard 200th-hand, so please understand that I'm repeating stuff I've heard, and not verified facts) I noticed a bit-by-bit migration of manufacturing of models from Geretsried to Markneukirchen. Surely (??), this saved quite a bit of money (just as moving a factory from California to rural Tennessee would save money) with no drop in quality.
Perhaps :?: , Buffet's purchase of that company (with a demonstrated-to-be high-grade manufacturing capability), is a similar long-term investment with eventual or immediate/gradual manufacturing migration plans.
just fwiw, not being a huge PT-6P fan (but appreciating them, admitting that I could do my job with one of them, and having received completely unsolicited compliments (i.e. NO "...so what do you guys think of the sound of this tuba?") when playing a Wisemann - with the 'bone section unaware that the instrument was Chinese...
...I strongly prefer (over an array of samples, and cost aside) the Wisemann "copy" to the B&S-manufactured original.
Survival or not I find it inexcusable for an instrument that is over 13K to play anything less than the highest standard for the instrument when compared to a clone of the same model that is 6K. If anything I hope that this market has put pressure on german manufacturers to up their game in quality control.bloke wrote:no...The Germans and the Chinese should be forced - via some sort of "uniting of nations" or something - to pay the same high wages, and to "sustain" this via unlimited debt creation and money-printing. That's much more "fair".bisontuba wrote:Totally makes sense...it's called survival...adapt or perish....bloke wrote:After GM was given B&S (after the fall of the "Iron Curtain") in exchange for keeping it open (at least, this is what I've heard 200th-hand, so please understand that I'm repeating stuff I've heard, and not verified facts) I noticed a bit-by-bit migration of manufacturing of models from Geretsried to Markneukirchen. Surely (??), this saved quite a bit of money (just as moving a factory from California to rural Tennessee would save money) with no drop in quality.
Perhaps :?: , Buffet's purchase of that company (with a demonstrated-to-be high-grade manufacturing capability), is a similar long-term investment with eventual or immediate/gradual manufacturing migration plans.
just fwiw, not being a huge PT-6P fan (but appreciating them, admitting that I could do my job with one of them, and having received completely unsolicited compliments (i.e. NO "...so what do you guys think of the sound of this tuba?") when playing a Wisemann - with the 'bone section unaware that the instrument was Chinese...
...I strongly prefer (over an array of samples, and cost aside) the Wisemann "copy" to the B&S-manufactured original.
B.S. rhetoric aside, $6050 rocks for that outfit, imho.
Thanks for the bump. We sold those 4, a dozen overall. All decent players, but I don't know that I need to buy any more. The poor valve cap threading bothers me, as does the shadiness of the maker.bloke wrote:bump