Using a poorly suited mouthpiece is far from a horror story. Plug the mouthpiece in and balance between sounding good and feeling good. The perfect mouthpiece will not hinder an excellent product for a given situation on a given horn with a given player while allowing hours and hours of playing without fatigue.Tubist of Time wrote:I've heard several horror stories about using a mouthpiece
How can you tell if a mouthpiece is too big for you?
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Re: How can you tell if a mouthpiece is too big for you?
sean chisham
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A simplistic way of finding out could be to try to look for consistency of tone in the whole register of the horn. Awesome tone from your 3rd partial (one fifth above fundamental of your horn) and down, weaker tone an octave higher and up meaning mouthpiece is too big. Fatigue is a good clue too!
Of course if you can fit a minivan in there
Of course if you can fit a minivan in there

1972 Cerveny 601
1920’s Conn 28J
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To double pedal! And beyond!
1920’s Conn 28J
Bunch-a-bones
To double pedal! And beyond!
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I plugged a PT50 into a Getzen CB50 (or "G50" by that time) and couldn't play the sucker in tune to save the world.
I suspect that it was a case of a mouthpiece being too big, but I haven't done enough experimentation to say for sure. I got a similarly "what the...?" result with the PT50 on the King sousaphone I had in college -- it felt like I was blowing against a wall, whereas a Conn Helleberg would just honk and honk with no problem.
I'd think that a mouthpiece is too big if 1) you can't play in tune, and/or 2) you get tired (although rim size & shape can affect endurance, too).
I suspect that it was a case of a mouthpiece being too big, but I haven't done enough experimentation to say for sure. I got a similarly "what the...?" result with the PT50 on the King sousaphone I had in college -- it felt like I was blowing against a wall, whereas a Conn Helleberg would just honk and honk with no problem.
I'd think that a mouthpiece is too big if 1) you can't play in tune, and/or 2) you get tired (although rim size & shape can affect endurance, too).