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Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 6:19 pm
by ttf_greenbean
What can be done about a bell that gets blatty too easily?...

Unsoldered, fairly thin, red brass bell.  Easy to color, sounds great.  But gets blatting as soon as you crank up the volume.  What have you all had success doing to help with this problem?  Solder the bead?  Put duct tape on the bell?  Replace the bell?  Sell the horn and move on?

Thanks in advance!

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 6:26 pm
by ttf_Matt K
I don't know about soldering the bell. I'd imagine that would make it project more.  Shires website backs that up as far as I can tell:

Quote1, 5, or 7: soldered bead—favors pointed articulations and centered sound.
2 or 8: unsoldered bead—favors broad, somewhat diffuse sound and softer, more covered articulations

Whats the rest of the horn? In my experience, you're better off changing things closer to the mouth to a certain extent.  The wrong combination of mouthpiece and leadpipe can make, for example, a bell that would sound great with some other combination be really quite edgy.  Or the opposite. I have a Shires S1YM small bore horn.  For a long time I was too cheap to get a Shires leadpipe for it so I was using a Yamaha "3" from one of their 600 series.  It was a very long pipe and I believe the taper must have been pretty gradual. It made the horn sound pretty reasonable with my Elliott "A" cup even.  I replaced that with a 2.5N pipe and now I'm back to my "C" cup on it because the "A" makes it brighter than I want. (The nickel material probably assists in that regard as well).

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 7:05 pm
by ttf_HouBassTrombone
Find a way either through equipment or playing changes to make the volume less about the amount of air or power and more about focus.
I can sound like a laser with my same horn but all nickel slide and lightweight mouthpiece. I get the volume needed for commercial work that way.
If I want to sound like a hammer or wall of sound then I use my regular slide and regular weight mouthpiece.
Or try a new bell Image

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 7:30 pm
by ttf_bigbassbone1
What makes you so sure it is the gear you are playing? Have you tried playing other stuff the same way with better results?

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 8:19 pm
by ttf_BillO
Quote from: greenbean on Apr 08, 2017, 06:19PMWhat can be done about a bell that gets blatty too easily?...

Unsoldered, fairly thin, red brass bell.  Easy to color, sounds great.  But gets blatting as soon as you crank up the volume.  What have you all had success doing to help with this problem?  Solder the bead?  Put duct tape on the bell?  Replace the bell?  Sell the horn and move on?

Thanks in advance!
Maybe there is no one trombone for all circumstances.  Use it where you don't need to peel paint off the walls.  By the sounds of it, it is a responsive and controllable instrument ... unless your trying to get Teutonic.  Use it for ballads or light classical or small ensemble jazz with amplification.  Or, if an easy to color horn that sounds great is really obnoxious to you, pass it on to someone that can use it. Image

Not all music requires ff+ dynamics.  Maybe you've been playing a Bach too long ... could be your approach that has been molded by that big, mean NY sound.

But you do own a King.  Is that the one you are talking about?

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 8:30 pm
by ttf_JBledsoe
Quote from: bigbassbone1 on Apr 08, 2017, 07:30PMWhat makes you so sure it is the gear you are playing? Have you tried playing other stuff the same way with better results?

I played a Benge 190 through high school and my first year of college, and back then I swore that the horn was too brittle at loud dynamics. After 12 years of more practice, that horn isn't bright or brittle at all!  Image

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 8:31 pm
by ttf_BGuttman
Quote from: BillO on Apr 08, 2017, 08:19PM...

But you do own a King.  Is that the one you are talking about?

King bell rims are soldered and are either yellow or gold brass (or sterling silver).  I don't know of a red brass King.

Sounds like he has a Conn.

Lindberg developed the "Sonic Balancer" (that collar that straps around the bell throat) for similar problems.  Maybe you need to tie a sock around the bell throat.

Generally thicker bells are less responsive but handle volume better.  There's no free lunch.

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 9:46 pm
by ttf_paulyg
I thought my 88H got blatty at fff, but then I got better.

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sat Apr 08, 2017 11:08 pm
by ttf_greenbean
It is a Yamaha YBL-620G.  The bell is actually gold brass; I said red brass above.

Yeah, maybe I just need to learn how to play it differently.  And I own or have tried several other basses that don't do it.  But it makes sense that I need to play it the way it wants to be played.  I will work on it. 

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sun Apr 09, 2017 12:13 am
by ttf_blast
Quote from: greenbean on Apr 08, 2017, 11:08PMIt is a Yamaha YBL-620G.  The bell is actually gold brass; I said red brass above.

Yeah, maybe I just need to learn how to play it differently.  And I own or have tried several other basses that don't do it.  But it makes sense that I need to play it the way it wants to be played.  I will work on it. 

You got it ! I had a student with one of those... he sounded great, but he thought it was too bright at loud volumes... he wasn't.... but he changed to a horn that he feels better about... took him almost a year to get the sound back, but now we are both happy ! See how you feel with it.

Chris Stearn

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sun Apr 09, 2017 6:39 am
by ttf_BillO
Quote from: BGuttman on Apr 08, 2017, 08:31PMKing bell rims are soldered
Really?  Maybe my 4B missed a step in the manufacturing process.  I can find no evidence of solder in or around the bead. I can even lift it up a bit with my thumbnail.  Maybe this is why it seems to play so much differently than others say of their King 4Bs.

Bell that overblows

Posted: Sun Apr 09, 2017 7:15 am
by ttf_Matt K
FWIW, I had the same "problem" with a Xeno tenor (882O). I sold it and tried a number of horns before finally settling now for a few years on a Shires setup 2RVET7. I also switched from 5ish sized pieces to Doug's XT104N rim.  Fast forward to about two years ago, I had to play an 882O for some gigs while my current horn was being built.  On a rim that was appropriately suited to my physiology, I no longer was excessively bright but I did find the horn to be quite uncomfortable for me to play.  So is it possible that its all the horn? Sure. Is it possible that its a great horn for you and its all on your end? Sure. But I suspect its somewhere in the middle but with stock horns like that you are more-or-less required to treat it as though its entirely the latter. Of course the downside to modular setups is that its easy to assume its entirely the former when it may not be the case && doubly that no amount of changing equipment will compensate for not playing correctly whereas putting in time on a horn will generally improve your ability to play.

I will say that I could not use the mouthpiece I use now on the Xeno when I played it.  I used the same rim but a shallower cup with a more open backbore on my piece (I used an XTE/E9 on it vs my normal XTG/G8). It continually surprises me how something so subtle as the differences in Doug's backbores makes such a huge difference.  Definitely worth a shot in my opinion, and really not much more expensive I would imagine than even doing something reversible like soldering your bell bead.  Its a lot easier to return one of his pieces than have mods done! You can trust me on that one  Image

Bell that overblows

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 1:20 am
by ttf_dj kennedy
 Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image

Quote from: JBledsoe on Apr 08, 2017, 08:30PMI played a Benge 190 through high school and my first year of college, and back then I swore that the horn was too brittle at loud dynamics. After 12 years of more practice, that horn isn't bright or brittle at all!  Image


Bell that overblows

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 7:04 am
by ttf_harrison.t.reed
Sounds like an 88H style issue. I used to use a lindberg resistance balancer to help out if I was playing really loud. They aren't made any longer.

I make bell throat wraps that might be just what you need -- no duct tape required. Rust or deep blue color. I can make you one for a small fee.

Image

Bell that overblows

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 7:16 am
by ttf_dj kennedy
replace  the   flare  ///cant  fix  thin



Quote from: greenbean on Apr 08, 2017, 06:19PMWhat can be done about a bell that gets blatty too easily?...

Unsoldered, fairly thin, red brass bell.  Easy to color, sounds great.  But gets blatting as soon as you crank up the volume.  What have you all had success doing to help with this problem?  Solder the bead?  Put duct tape on the bell?  Replace the bell?  Sell the horn and move on?

Thanks in advance!


Bell that overblows

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 8:00 am
by ttf_daveyboy37
I don't think the 620G bell is that thin of a bell, comparatively speaking. What type of mouthpiece are you using with it?  Is it more in the high range, or the lower range?

I play a 612RII, which has a 10 inch bell, red brass, unsoldered rim. It can get blatty depending on how I approach the louder notes. More articulation gets more edge. Slower air stream with more support allows me to get more volume without the edge. It's also a fairly open horn, so with a more open mouthpiece you can overblow it a bit.

Bell that overblows

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 8:02 am
by ttf_Bach42T
My Thayer valve occasionally exhibits a blatty-like tone when engaged at low volumes.  Not sure why.

Bell that overblows

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2017 10:19 pm
by ttf_dj kennedy
king  2b  plus  early   versions  ==extremely   light  ==
   great  microphone  horns 
jim pugh  full custom 2b+ gold plated   no  slide  crook  bumper
  unplayed  beautiful -unplayable  past  an mf --DONT  GO THERE
=============================
hard  to  push past  mf
=================================
  had  a thinny 78  --very nasty  ---too thin --brassy  bbbbbbbbbbbbrassy
also  thinny  42   just  ugly   past  a certain  volume
  ===========
then the  courtois jazz   couldnt  get  over  55 ????????
 ran out of gas
---------
oh  yes  you can   lay back  ease  off the pedal grab throat  with your   hand etc
use  a bass slide 
------------
  go ahead  suffer  with  it

Bell that overblows

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2017 10:03 pm
by ttf_greenbean
Update...

First, thanks to you all for your thoughts.   I decided to change the bell since I don't have this problem with other horns.  And might want to play beyond mf once in a while!

I picked up a Shires yellow brass HW bell.  Properly mounted by Dick Akright.  Plays beautifully.  Sounds great at all dynamics! 

(I am using a Hammond 19BL, by the way.)

Bell that overblows

Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2017 10:03 pm
by ttf_greenbean
Update...

First, thanks to you all for your thoughts.   I decided to change the bell since I don't have this problem with other horns.  And might want to play beyond mf once in a while!

I picked up a Shires yellow brass HW bell.  Properly mounted by Dick Akright.  Plays beautifully.  Sounds great at all dynamics! 

(I am using a Hammond 19BL, by the way.)