First time poster here. Do any of you have thoughts about tuning-in-slide for large tenors, like what Greenhoe and some of the other custom makers are doing. Please share
Thank you, in advance!
Jon
I'm having quite a good experience with a 70H bell and 72H slide (accident of history). It's my lightest horn.harrisonreed wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2026 4:14 am The question you need to ask yourself is this:
Does my tuning slide really have any variation beyond a few mm from day to day, in regards to where I tune it?
Followed by:
Do I pull my tuning slide more than 1" out?
If the answer to both of those is "No", the tuning mechanism is essentially completely dead weight if it's TIS, or it's a "flaw" in the design if it's TIB.
This would be true if the taper of the main bell crook didn't matter. Getting the constant taper through the bell section is the reason for TIS in the first place.harrisonreed wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2026 4:14 am ... the tuning mechanism is essentially completely dead weight if it's TIS, or it's a "flaw" in the design if it's TIB.
Yep. I definitely hit on that point in my post prior to the one you quoted -- I'm a fan of those TIS bells, and it's why I consider the TIB to be "flawed" design (even though all my horns have one). Like sf105 has done, they have the constant taper 70H mated to a non-TIS slide.hyperbolica wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2026 6:59 amThis would be true if the taper of the main bell crook didn't matter. Getting the constant taper through the bell section is the reason for TIS in the first place.harrisonreed wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2026 4:14 am ... the tuning mechanism is essentially completely dead weight if it's TIS, or it's a "flaw" in the design if it's TIB.
I'm not likely to play one, but I'm curious.harrisonreed wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2026 4:14 am The question you need to ask yourself is this:
Does my tuning slide really have any variation beyond a few mm from day to day, in regards to where I tune it?
Followed by:
Do I pull my tuning slide more than 1" out?
If the answer to both of those is "No", the tuning mechanism is essentially completely dead weight if it's TIS, or it's a "flaw" in the design if it's TIB.
If the answer to either one is "yes", then the benefits of the tuning mechanism will outweigh the cons, and the TIS might be even better if the weight doesn't bother you, especially if you usually pull your tuning slide out miles and miles to play in tune. They play smoother and usually have better aligned partials.
Yep a TIB bell, even pushed in all the way, plays different from a constant taper bell. That's why fans of TIS love them.timothy42b wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 9:40 am
Given a TIS, is there significant difference between a Tuning Slide Bell pushed all the way closed, and a non tuning bell with constant expansion with no tuning slide at all?
The slide will be heavy. The bell section should be somewhat lighter, given no tuning slide. (a trigger attachment, though......)
It would be an interesting experiment. I wonder, though, if some of the tone colour comes from the heavier slide. Apparently, the players who convinced Conn to drop the Opera Wheel from the production 62H then tried to get them to put it back.Bassbone11 wrote: Mon May 04, 2026 12:31 pm do we think part of the reason people stay away is because of the weight? Has anyone looked into carbon fiber TIS slides? I imagine something similar to the TromboneLAB slides would be a possible end result.
I, for one useless amateur opinion, prefer the sound of a heavier slide and a lighter bell.sf105 wrote: Tue May 05, 2026 12:39 pmIt would be an interesting experiment. I wonder, though, if some of the tone colour comes from the heavier slide. Apparently, the players who convinced Conn to drop the Opera Wheel from the production 62H then tried to get them to put it back.Bassbone11 wrote: Mon May 04, 2026 12:31 pm do we think part of the reason people stay away is because of the weight? Has anyone looked into carbon fiber TIS slides? I imagine something similar to the TromboneLAB slides would be a possible end result.
S
Totally with you on this. This is kind of the assumed configuration for most Conns. A lot of people tend to have this knee-jerk reaction against "heavy slides", but it really isn't a detriment to playing unless you're doing crazy bebop, which i'm not doing, and I'd be willing to guess that most of us here really aren't doing.elmsandr wrote: Wed May 06, 2026 11:09 am
I, for one useless amateur opinion, prefer the sound of a heavier slide and a lighter bell.