Instrument List

ID Instrument Maker Model Serial# Manuf. Date Key/Pitch Click on Picture to Enlarge
3272 Cimbasso Kasal F
Engraved Lad Kasal Lydomysli F Bell: 9 in Tuba Shank receiver Bore: .550 Pryorphone said: I must posit that Reply #1 is a Frankenhorn, particularly when compared to the example at the top of the page. The seller admitted to at least creating the anlged receiver (which is all he claimed he needed to do to "put" it in Eb), and the bell-valve connection looks suspiciously like a con sousaphone neck. Nor do the valve slides look long enough to have gone from G to F to Eb.
1489 Tuba Alexander F
by Anton Alexander of Mainz Germany 10in bell 32in long
16 Vocal Horn Addison-Lucas 1865 F
(210 Regent St. W., London) Advertised as a Ballad horn, but the fact that it is probably an F instrument and uses a "French" horn mouthpiece and has a smaller 6.5" bell, these attributes place it in the Vocal horn camp. Vocal horns are essentially tenor horns pitched in F that use a "French" horn mouthpiece.

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