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Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2018 8:20 pm
by Backbone
Thought this might be a good resource here. There are others so if you find one you think is good, post it here!

I'll go first:

http://www.dwerden.com/Mouthpieces/trombone.cfm

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2018 8:25 pm
by Reedman1

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2018 9:50 pm
by Kbiggs

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2018 11:42 pm
by Doug Elliott
Comparisons can't be valid when many of the rim size listings are as much as .020" wrong. I have no idea where some of the manufacturers came up with their numbers. And then they get repeated endlessly on charts like these.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sat Sep 01, 2018 12:38 am
by Posaunus
Mouthpiece Charts:

Accurate - hardly (especially with so much sample-to-sample variation within any given mouthpiece designation).
...¤ Particularly unreliable with regard to Cup I.D., where there is no standard way / place to measure this dimension.
...¤ Listed Throat diameters are a little better (usually accurate with one drill size).

Helpful - sort of. At least these charts generally display the different manufacturers' numbering systems and relative sizes within a given system and roughly from one manufacturer to another.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sat Sep 01, 2018 10:01 am
by Kbiggs
I use a mpc chart as a guideline to answer the question, “What’s roughly the same size or in the same ballpark,” not “What’s the equivalent?”

Mpc charts often only list rim sizes—they rarely list other common variables. Doug’s mouthpiece charts are an exception: his charts list cup depths, as well. Some, like Greg Black, list other common variables, like drill or reamer size. But there are so many other variables to the size and shape of a mouthpiece that it’s impossible to know ahead of time whether the typical example of model X from maker Y will work well with person Z. And that’s to say nothing about whether the typical example of model X from maker Y will be the same or roughly the same in 1, 5, 10, or 20 years.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sat Sep 01, 2018 11:09 am
by Doug Elliott
The .020 discrepancy that 's so prevalent in those charts pretty much puts some mouthpieces in a different ballpark. Many players are sensitive to a .005 difference.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sat Sep 01, 2018 11:14 am
by BGuttman
I can offer some experience going wrong from "comparison charts". I generally play 1.02" (Bach 4) rims. I bought a Marcinkiewicz 8H, which was supposed to be the same size. It was too small. Then I see them label it 8H-6.5AL. That's about the size it really was.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2018 6:53 pm
by dershem
I found the Kanstul Mouthpiece Comparator very useful, but it was only for trumpet 'pieces.
That's the only really valid way to compare if you don' have them all at hand.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2018 6:02 am
by Reedman1
A lot of the mouthpiece makers offer some kind of comparison chart. They’re not terrible, but there are errors. I think a more useful comparison chart would be group-sourced by players, saying which mouthpieces play and feel like others of approximate similar size.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sun Sep 09, 2018 7:59 pm
by Backbone
Reedman1 wrote: Sat Sep 08, 2018 6:02 am A lot of the mouthpiece makers offer some kind of comparison chart. They’re not terrible, but there are errors. I think a more useful comparison chart would be group-sourced by players, saying which mouthpieces play and feel like others of approximate similar size.
Sounds like a challenge to me! :D

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 9:24 am
by Reedman1
Backbone wrote: Sun Sep 09, 2018 7:59 pm
Reedman1 wrote: Sat Sep 08, 2018 6:02 am A lot of the mouthpiece makers offer some kind of comparison chart. They’re not terrible, but there are errors. I think a more useful comparison chart would be group-sourced by players, saying which mouthpieces play and feel like others of approximate similar size.
Sounds like a challenge to me! :D
Maybe... ;). On the other hand, agreeing to criteria could be tough. And then you have to factor in the instrument.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 11:45 am
by ghmerrill
I don't think you can establish criteria precisely enough to be of significant value. As Doug Elliott has pointed out on more than one occasion, you're dealing with complex curves on 3-D surfaces. This in itself introduces substantial issues in deciding what to compare and how to compare it, and what those comparisons might mean. Then introduce the variations of the players own facial/dental structure, and what can you expect? It might be regarded as an interesting academic exercise in modeling, but beyond that I doubt that you'd get much more practical value than what we have now. Maybe just 3-D diagrams with dimensions would be as good as anything else.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 12:23 pm
by JohnL
Part of the problem is that there isn't a consensus on what to measure and how to measure it...

Anyone sufficiently involved with manufacturing technology to know the current level of precision of an affordable laser scanner? The data for the Kanstul Mouthpiece Comparator was compiled from scans done on a coordinate measuring machine. CMM time is pretty expensive.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 12:52 pm
by Reedman1
For criteria for comparison, I was thinking of more subjective things, such as bright vs. dark, bite is sharp or soft, diameter feels pretty much like Bach #... An example: Curry 6C feels to me like a slightly large Bach 7C, with a softer bite. It's got a nice ringing tone on the bright side. On my .500 bore tenor, I get from pedal Bb to 3 octaves above. Have to start working for upper register about E above Middle C. I think that kind of comparison may be more useful player to player. YMMV.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 1:30 pm
by Doug Elliott
When there's as much as .020 of an inch measurable difference in rim size between samples of the same mouthpiece, or that far away from the published specs, there's not a lot of point in assuming any kind of reliability of any chart. Some of the published specs are laughable.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 1:51 pm
by Reedman1
Doug Elliott wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 1:30 pm When there's as much as .020 of an inch measurable difference in rim size between samples of the same mouthpiece, or that far away from the published specs, there's not a lot of point in assuming any kind of reliability of any chart. Some of the published specs are laughable.
What do you think of subjective comparisons of sound and feel? Is there too much variation from player to player and horn to horn?

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 3:48 pm
by Doug Elliott
For most players, the typical variation between samples (and/or variation from published specs) of mouthpieces by some of the relatively major manufacturers is enough to make the difference between playable and unplayable. What use is somebody's opinion of their particular mouthpiece when is has almost no resemblance to another marked wit the same number? And a "5G" by one maker is barely related to a Bach 5G, where the number came from.

How would you feel if trombones were that inconsistent? Oh wait, they are...
Well at least a .547 bore slide is likely to really be .547, and not .537 or .557

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 4:46 pm
by bimmerman
Doug Elliott wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 3:48 pm For most players, the typical variation between samples (and/or variation from published specs) of mouthpieces by some of the relatively major manufacturers is enough to make the difference between playable and unplayable. What use is somebody's opinion of their particular mouthpiece when is has almost no resemblance to another marked wit the same number? And a "5G" by one maker is barely related to a Bach 5G, where the number came from.

How would you feel if trombones were that inconsistent? Oh wait, they are...
Well at least a .547 bore slide is likely to really be .547, and not .537 or .557
Funnily enough, my dad and I both have Edwards .525/547 slides. His measures .522, mine is .525. Hooray consistency!

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 4:48 pm
by ghmerrill
Reedman1 wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 12:52 pm For criteria for comparison, I was thinking of more subjective things, such as bright vs. dark, bite is sharp or soft, diameter feels pretty much like ...
The problem with subjective criteria is that they're ... er ... subjective. And yet the whole point of this is to get some comparison that is meaningful to all players -- so not subjective. You can't even get a good non-subjective comparison of what "bright", "dark", "sharp bite", "soft bight", etc. are -- precisely because these are subjective evaluations. So then the best you could hope for is a kind of "consensus" comparison. Then in order to use that consensus comparison you have to decide where you stand individually with respect to those who are in the consensus and those who aren't. And exactly how do you do that?

This is pretty much what we have today -- with multiple mouthpiece charts where the chart-maker is either expressing his own opinion or parroting the description of someone else (player, manufacturer, ...). And we see the huge variation in this and how people often disagree with even the simplist comparison (It's very similar to a 1.5G. No, it's not, it's more like a 1.25G. Not, it's not, ...). So it all turns into a real "ballpark" kind of description with a wide variance of acceptance and usefulness -- because of the subjectivity. Not totally without value perhaps. But not something on the basis of which you can make a confident decision. At best, something that you can use to narrow down what pieces you want to try.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 5:38 am
by Reedman1
ghmerrill wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 4:48 pm
Reedman1 wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 12:52 pm For criteria for comparison, I was thinking of more subjective things, such as bright vs. dark, bite is sharp or soft, diameter feels pretty much like ...

This is pretty much what we have today -- At best, something that you can use to narrow down what pieces you want to try.
That’s my point. Mouthpiece makers don’t have a universal standard for taking measurements, and samples can be inconsistent. But although players differ both physically and in terms of how they interpret terms such as bright and dark, there is enough commonality that a significant proportion of players will have a similar experience with the same make and model of mouthpiece. Otherwise, why would so many people play a 6.5 AL? Even if makers did adopt a universal measurement standard and we all agreed on exact acoustical reference points for “bright” and “dark”, I am quite sure that no mouthpiece comparison chart would ever be more than a ballpark guide for most of us. And since it’s unlikely that we will ever get all the mouthpiece makers to agree on a universal standard, subjective evaluations become relatively more useful. Have a mouthpiece that feels too small? Too big? Bite is too sharp? Tone is blatty or colorless or muffled or brilliant? Those are all subjective criteria on which we base our (hopefully) final selections. Ever have a teacher or a section mate suggest a mouthpiece to try, and maybe it worked out and maybe it didn’t, but you narrowed down your search? Same thing.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 6:33 am
by Pre59
Maybe an answer is to have a set of measurement tools, with dimensions agreed by the manufactures that give a visual guide to the sizes, rather than a numeral one.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 8:34 am
by ghmerrill
Reedman1 wrote: Tue Sep 11, 2018 5:38 am Otherwise, why would so many people play a 6.5 AL?
I don't know. Why would so many tuba players play a 24AW -- which is also generally agreed to be dreadful? There are a number of answers to questions like this, and often they don't have to do with the actual features of the mouthpiece and comparisons of it to others which most people haven't even tried. :roll:

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 9:38 am
by elmsandr
Pre59 wrote: Tue Sep 11, 2018 6:33 am Maybe an answer is to have a set of measurement tools, with dimensions agreed by the manufactures that give a visual guide to the sizes, rather than a numeral one.
Except, that is going backwards. That is going back to pre-industrialized ways of measurement.

What we need more is just a better use of available measurement tools. As silly as it is, Taking a 1" Gage disc (think a quarter) and seeing how far down it sits from the highest point of the rim will tell you more about a lot of pieces than the printed dimension. I guarantee that the printed measurement exists on that rim someplace, we just want to know more about where and how they measured it. If we agree to use discs and report the depths, that would tell us a lot more than some guy with a caliper filling out a chart randomly.

Doug brings in another point, the precision of how closely each example matches each other. How repeatable are they? The technology to make them match exists well, but without a defined place and method to measure, they will vary as much as the measurement method.

Cheers,
Andy

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 10:49 am
by Reedman1
Or maybe we have to make people more uniform... :?

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 11:19 am
by Pre59
elmsandr wrote: Tue Sep 11, 2018 9:38 am
What we need more is just a better use of available measurement tools. As silly as it is, Taking a 1" Gage disc (think a quarter) and seeing how far down it sits from the highest point of the rim will tell you more about a lot of pieces than the printed dimension.
Doug brings in another point, the precision of how closely each example matches each other. How repeatable are they? The technology to make them match exists well, but without a defined place and method to measure, they will vary as much as the measurement method.

Cheers,
Andy
This what I mean. In the UK using a 10p coin is a good way to judge the width of a m/p, coins are made to a rigid standard. Add a pencil and a few drill bits for the bore/backbore.

When I'm with other trombonists and curious about their m/p I get a coin out and my "QE2 bingo pencil" to get a rough idea of it's dimensions, without imbibing someones cold germs etc..

When I get around to selling any of my spare 'pieces on eBay I'll know that a picture with this coin sitting on top of the m/p is going to be (in the uk) a good indicator of its rim size to the potential buyer.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2018 5:02 pm
by Kbiggs
Doug Elliott wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 3:48 pm
How would you feel if trombones were that inconsistent? Oh wait, they are...
Well at least a .547 bore slide is likely to really be .547, and not .537 or .557
This put it in perspecdtive for me. Thanks Doug.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Thu Sep 13, 2018 1:21 pm
by BurckhardtS
Doug Elliott wrote: Mon Sep 10, 2018 3:48 pm For most players, the typical variation between samples (and/or variation from published specs) of mouthpieces by some of the relatively major manufacturers is enough to make the difference between playable and unplayable. What use is somebody's opinion of their particular mouthpiece when is has almost no resemblance to another marked wit the same number? And a "5G" by one maker is barely related to a Bach 5G, where the number came from.

How would you feel if trombones were that inconsistent? Oh wait, they are...
Well at least a .547 bore slide is likely to really be .547, and not .537 or .557
I forgot my mouthpiece the other day and the only other mouthpiece in my case was a Bach 4G.

I would really like to know what Bach 4G this was because it really didn't feel any different than my 1.06" rim... I didn't even realize until after the sectional was over that I was playing on a different mouthpiece.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Feb 22, 2019 11:52 am
by jph
BGuttman wrote: Sat Sep 01, 2018 11:14 am I can offer some experience going wrong from "comparison charts". I generally play 1.02" (Bach 4) rims. I bought a Marcinkiewicz 8H, which was supposed to be the same size. It was too small. Then I see them label it 8H-6.5AL. That's about the size it really was.
Valuable info, Bruce. I swear the manufacturer (Marcy) regularly mixes up the left-right columns on their charts. Mouthpiece Express accurately lists Bach comparables, along with the same mixed up data that Marcy uses...at least the comparables are pretty much correct.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Feb 22, 2019 1:03 pm
by JohntheTheologian
I really like Marcinckiewicz mps, but I can't make much sense out of their measurements compared to others or even compared to other Marc mps on the chart. I just know that I like the 8H on small bore, the 4 on large bore and the 3 on bass. When my bass chops get stronger, I'm likely to try one of their larger bass mps.

I think their strange measurements may have kept some from trying a very good line of mps.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sat Feb 23, 2019 7:28 am
by trombonedemon
People feel different, differently on any given day of the year. Its part of the music game. So measurements are kinda irrelevant and seems to be on the moot side. Go with that dose not hurt you is my game.

The Alessi one rim, to me does not feel like 1 1/2 Bach rim, buuuuuut on a thinner lip structure individual it might. To me it feels like 2 or a 3 w/that C cup it has. Who am I to tell a person what and how to feel (especially to Joe Alessi.)

I've come to terms that the "Mouth Piece Game" is expensive and requires lots of trial and error, some personal time, and a little anger to come to some efficacy.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2019 8:53 am
by jph
I just measured the inside diameter of the Marcinkiewicz 8HL 6.5AL, tough because of the rounded inside rim, and is was ever so slightly off 26 mm, 25.9...a small 4 would be the best estimate.Their website states it is 26.13. The cup, though, has even a bit less depth than a Bach 6.5AL! It's very shallow. Bottom-line is that I think it plays much more like a well-rounded rim Schilke 51B in my opinion. Very bright. Forget the valve range, i.e. F attachment E through C with this piece, but to be fair any very small cup mouthpiece is a no-go in this area anyway. Very Good for higher register, slower stuff, though. Hammond 11M, which comes with a large standard symphonic backbore, provides a much fuller sound vs a nasal effect (sometimes) with the Marcinkiewicz.
Again, just an quick read based on my specific equipment and embouchure.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2019 10:15 am
by JohntheTheologian
Years ago I went from a Bach 6 1/2 AL to a Marc 8H and the transition in size was not a problem. Felt about the szme, but I liked the rim shape a whole lot better on the Marc. The Backbore is bigger, though because I can put out much more sound on my Conn 48h with the Marc 8H than the Bach 6 1/2 AL.

Marcs are funny mps in their sizing though. I have a 4 that I use on my large bore and a 3 that I use on my bass bone and there's a huge gap between them. The 4 is just a tad bigger, although a bit shallower cup and smaller throat, than my UMI 5G that I also use on the large bore while the Marc 3 is about a Bach 2 size-- it's just a tad smaller than the Bach 1 1/2 G bass bone mp and clearly has a bass bone throat and backbore.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2019 5:40 pm
by jph
The Marc 8H 6.5AL might be a bit more funnel-shaped than the Bach 6.5AL, and it is lighter in weight.
Nonetheless, it is one of the few 4-sized large shank offered mouthpieces (at approx. 1.02 inches, 25.9mm) that does not have an ample cup. I'd call it a 1.02, D+ cup, using the Elliott system, for the Comparison Chart.
It is good for delicate situations where you do want responsiveness, but do not want the darkness, openness and extra air requirements that a symphonic backbore can bring.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2019 7:04 am
by ssking2b
I use the Marc 8H/6.5AL on parts that stay in the upper register of the orchestral trombone. For general all around symphonic tenor playing I use a Marc 5GW, or a Conn Remmington, or a Holton Haney LBT, or a Maurice Bentafa (sp??) TRG (wooden!). All the general pieces are similar in size but different in composition, throat, etc. The one I use just depends on the piece of music I am playing, and how I feel at the time! Very scientific! But, I get no complaints!

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2019 2:15 pm
by jph
Re: Marc 8H/6.5AL
Phil,
Yes, a dedicated high-register piece. Great on Keith Brown's The Swan, for instance. It can sing.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Fri Mar 29, 2019 5:33 am
by baileyman
Seems physical measurements like rim width could be misleading and not comparable in some ways.

My wife and I recently got new wedding rings. Mine went from a narrowish band with a rounded inner contour to a wide one with a flat inner contour. Using a ring measuring stick, it was easy to see the old one had gotten small, so we ordered that size in the new ring.

When it arrived, it was impossibly tight. Why? Not sure. The contour has something to do with it. The sharp initial edge may have a lot to do with it. I notice the measuring rings we used had rounded inner contour.

So trying various other sizing rings, it seemed trying for TWO SIZES larger was thing to do. It arrived and is perfect.

I would expect then that two pieces of the same rim inner diameter could feel and behave vastly different depending on the contour of the cushion area and how it curves in to the rim diameter. So comparison charts seem like very rough guidance only.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 12:43 pm
by Pbone
Bonjour, je viens d'acheter un king b2 il était fourni avec une embouchure Bach 6 et 1/2 mais je désirerai avoir la même embouchure que celle que j'ai pour mon 42b Bach c'est une remington. Existe t'il une embouchure similaire mais bien en entendu avec une petite queue merci

Translation:
Hello, I just bought a king 2B it was supplied with a Bach mouthpiece 6 and 1/2 but I would like to have the same mouthpiece as the one I have for my 42b Bach, which is a Remington. Is there a similar mouthpiece but of course with a small shank? thank you

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 12:55 pm
by BGuttman
Please note: We try to post in English on this Forum. Many of our readers are English speakers and won't be able to understand a post in another language. I translated your post into English. If you don't speak or write English, try using a translator like Google Translate.

Back to your question: Yes, you can get a mouthpiece for your King 2B about the same size as the Remington.

There is a small shank Remington that was supplied with the Connstellation models about 50 years ago and these show up on Ebay from time to time. You might even see them in our Classifieds.

The Remington is similar in size to a Bach 5 (or 5G). There is a 5GS available in small shank, or a Bach 5. The Denis Wick 5BS may work if you like the rim -- some do and some don't. Schilke or Yamaha 51 is another model that is similar. If money is no object, Doug Elliott makes a system that is a rim, a cup, and a shank. A LT 101 rim, LT E cup and an E2 shank should work well in your 2B.

Incidentally, how well does your Remington fit the Bach 42B? The shank is intended for the Conn large bore trombones (particularly the 88H) and those mouthpieces need a lot of "persuading" to fit in a standard large shank receiver.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 1:23 pm
by Posaunus
Pbone wrote: Mon Jan 09, 2023 12:43 pm Bonjour, je viens d'acheter un king b2 il était fourni avec une embouchure Bach 6 et 1/2 mais je désirerai avoir la même embouchure que celle que j'ai pour mon 42b Bach c'est une remington. Existe t'il une embouchure similaire mais bien en entendu avec une petite queue merci

Translation:
Hello, I just bought a king 2B it was supplied with a Bach mouthpiece 6 and 1/2 but I would like to have the same mouthpiece as the one I have for my 42b Bach, which is a Remington. Is there a similar mouthpiece but of course with a small shank? thank you
Welcome, Pbone. Your English translation is excellent.

You ask an interesting question. The large-shank "Remington" mouthpiece was actually made to fit a Conn 88H, and has a slightly different taper to fit the 88H receiver. (So it won't fit so well in the Bach 2B receiver.)

In any case, Conn did manufacture a small-shank version of this mouthpiece known as the Connstellation "Remington" - but it has been a long time since they were made and they are very rare. It is also a rather large mouthpiece for the small-bore King 2B trombone. If you like the Conn mouthpiece, you may be happier with a Conn 3 or Conn 2 mouthpiece for your 2B - they are easier to find, but also no longer made.

Otherwise, there are many fine choices for a 2B mouthpiece.

Bonne chance!

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 4:53 pm
by Pbone
BGuttman wrote: Mon Jan 09, 2023 12:55 pm Please note: We try to post in English on this Forum. Many of our readers are English speakers and won't be able to understand a post in another language. I translated your post into English. If you don't speak or write English, try using a translator like Google Translate.

Back to your question: Yes, you can get a mouthpiece for your King 2B about the same size as the Remington.

There is a small shank Remington that was supplied with the Connstellation models about 50 years ago and these show up on Ebay from time to time. You might even see them in our Classifieds.

The Remington is similar in size to a Bach 5 (or 5G). There is a 5GS available in small shank, or a Bach 5. The Denis Wick 5BS may work if you like the rim -- some do and some don't. Schilke or Yamaha 51 is another model that is similar. If money is no object, Doug Elliott makes a system that is a rim, a cup, and a shank. A LT 101 rim, LT E cup and an E2 shank should work well in your 2B.

Incidentally, how well does your Remington fit the Bach 42B? The shank is intended for the Conn large bore trombones (particularly the 88H) and those mouthpieces need a lot of "persuading" to fit in a standard large shank receiver.

OK but l'english and me not very friend sorry. I'm utilise à traducteur for réponses. Pour répondre à votre question il y a un léger jeu au niveau du haut de la queue car il n'y a pas le même angle entre la queue et la coulisse et j'ai raccourci la queue car c'était une longue queue et mon 42b était trop bas 438 au lieu de 442 hertz au niveau du son j'aime bien mais il ne sonne ou corne pas autant que je le désire il reste un trombone classique

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 6:26 pm
by BGuttman
Translation of your response:
I'm used for translator for answers. To answer your question there is a light game at the top of the shank because there is not the same angle between the shank and the receiver and I shortened the shank because it was a long shank and my 42b was too low 438 instead of 442 hertz in terms of sound I like it but it does not ring or horn as much as I want it remains a classic trombone
Google Translate made quite a mess of your post. From what I can determine you had to shorten the length of the Remington shank because of a bad fit with the Bach receiver (slide). This is exactly what I would expect if you tried to insert the Remington into a Bach slide: it would wobble and stick out too far. If I were in your position I would have tried to machine the Remington shank to increase the taper, or have a Bach taper welded on in place of the Remington.

Maybe some of our native French speakers can make better sense of what you said.

Still, my answer to your original question remains. You can look for a Constellation Remington or one of the other mouthpieces I mentioned. The King 2B would have originally shipped with a King M31 mouthpiece (no longer made), that is more like a Schilke 45 or Bach 12C (or the Conn 3 mentioned by Posaunus)

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 7:39 pm
by Pbone
Ce que vous avez marqué est en effet ce que je voulais dire quand au tourneur j'y ai effectivement penser et j'en recherche ardemment pour faire cette légère finition et je pense que vous avez répondu à mes questions en citant des références d'embouchures que je vais m'empresser d'essayer merci à vous tous cordialement

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 8:38 pm
by BGuttman
Translation
What you marked is indeed what I wanted to say when at the turner I actually thought about it and I am eagerly looking for it to do this slight finish and I think you answered my questions by citing mouthpiece references that I will hasten to try thank you all cordially

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 9:47 pm
by ParLawGod
Best luck I've had is buying and comparing...but that's an expensive hobby! :)

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Jan 10, 2023 12:06 pm
by Pbone
Oui en effet le test des embouchures est toujours compliqué maintenant j'ai quelques magasins qui font tester les embouchures pas toutes les marques mais c'est déjà ca :)

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Tue Jan 10, 2023 3:44 pm
by Posaunus
Pbone wrote: Tue Jan 10, 2023 12:06 pm Oui en effet le test des embouchures est toujours compliqué maintenant j'ai quelques magasins qui font tester les embouchures pas toutes les marques mais c'est déjà ca :)
Very rough translation:
Yes mouthpiece testing is indeed always complicated. Now I can find a few stores that have mouthpieces to test, but not all brands. That's it.

Re: Mouthpiece Comparison Charts

Posted: Sun Jan 15, 2023 2:36 pm
by jph
In my opinion, based on my experiences of owning and testing various pieces over the years, the DOUG ELLIOTT site comparison charts are exceptionally accurate. He is also quite modest in stating his reservations concerning the interpretation of the estimates.
He limits the number of comparisons, which is realistic.