Jack Denniston wrote:A couple questions-
1. Are these differences significant, or for all practical purposes, to the average listener, would the ff and pp volumes sound about the same, from one tuba to the next, in all registers?
2. What about projection? Is it true that some tubas project the sound better than others? If you put the decibal meter at the back of a large hall, would these results change?
1. I actually found quite significant differences from note to note on just one tuba and the figures given are the loudest, or quietest in that range. So one could not maintain quite the decibel level given if playing a scale. For practical purposes differences in volumes from one tuba to the next largely do not seem significant.
2. I just was trying out with a Db meter on my music stand in my practice room, so it tells nothing about projection out into the hall. However it is interesting that although the levels recorded for the PT-15 F are significantly louder in medium/higher register than the 2040/5 Eb, from recordings I have made using my Zoom H2 (in the last few months I have recorded all my concerts), the Eb definitely seems to project more out into the hall playing with orchestra. The decibel levels are interesting, but actually recording oneself from out in the hall is much more useful as a musical assessment tool. The thing with measuring decibels is that it does not take into account the differing harmonic profiles of the sound *, so I guess that could explain it being not directly related to projection?
One thing I did not mention in original post is that for short sforzando notes I could easily hit 126 Db in some registers, the maximum the device could register (!!!), but that would quickly diminish. So remember the figures given are for notes sustained over a couple seconds.
*
I have some software to analysis sound profile which I got from an elephant communication researcher, so that will be my next experiment