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trickg Heavyweight Member
Joined: 02 Jan 2002 Posts: 5698 Location: Glen Burnie, Maryland
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Posted: Thu Oct 25, 2018 9:36 am Post subject: |
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altamira_28 wrote: | Well, over 7 years later, it's still one of my favorite horns. I'm actually using it in a rehearsal tonight. I'm playing mainly on a 1602LTR because they needed a lightweight model artist, and I actually like the horn, but I'm never getting rid of my beautiful 1600i. Still great horns, and I'd recommend them to anyone.
Josh |
Josh, at one point I had thought that I wanted to get back to a Bach for the purposes of blending and getting a bit more of a "classical" sound, for whatever that's worth. I even went so far as to buy a Strad, put on a custom leadpipe, and that sort of thing.
Ultimately I keep going back to the Jupiter 1600i Ingram, and for the sole reason that it just plays well for me. I was able to get the sound I was looking for when I took a chance on an ACB 3B mouthpiece - that piece darkened my sound up for the legit playing I do.
At the end of the day, most laypersons don't have a clue about anything regarding a trumpet's sound other than that it is, in fact, a trumpet, so past that, I don't worry about it. _________________ Patrick Gleason
- Jupiter 1600i, ACB 3C, Warburton 4SVW/Titmus RT2
- Brasspire Unicorn C
- ACB Doubler
"95% of the average 'weekend warrior's' problems will be solved by an additional 30 minutes of insightful practice." - PLP |
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trickg Heavyweight Member
Joined: 02 Jan 2002 Posts: 5698 Location: Glen Burnie, Maryland
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Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2023 5:05 pm Post subject: |
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I'm going to resurrect this thread with an observation I made tonight.
There are two intonation quirks I've never liked about my Jupiter 1600I:
1. 4th line D is flat
2. 1st ledger B natural above the staff is sharp
I've been fiddling around with a new mouthpiece a bit - the Yamaha Bobby Shew Lead. I've had some success with it, but it's TIGHT.
With that in mind I got a wild hair to try out the more rounded tuning slide. I'd always remembered it feeling a bit more open, although I also felt that the slotting wasn't quite as defined as with the squared standard "D" shaped tuning slide.
The surprising observation is that both the 4th line D and the upper B natural seemed to be improved/corrected. The D sits pretty much where it's supposed to without feeling low, and the B seems to center really well and is lower than the B with the squared tuning slide.
Right now this is anecdotal and I did it at the end of a practice, so I have nothing empirical to back up that observation, but I'll be testing it in a bit more detail in the next few days.
The other added benefit is that with the tighter backbore of the Bobby Shew Lead, the horn no longer feels quite so tight as it did before.
Is this a winning combination? Dunno - time will tell I suppose.
In other news I recently ordered a Ken Titmus RT2 backbore to try with my Warburton cup - it's supposed to be a bit tighter and more efficient than the KT, but that's another story for another day. _________________ Patrick Gleason
- Jupiter 1600i, ACB 3C, Warburton 4SVW/Titmus RT2
- Brasspire Unicorn C
- ACB Doubler
"95% of the average 'weekend warrior's' problems will be solved by an additional 30 minutes of insightful practice." - PLP |
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JonathanM Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Aug 2007 Posts: 2019 Location: Charleston, SC
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Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2023 5:27 pm Post subject: |
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^^^ Good news!
In general, I'm a believer that there is certainly a 'best' mouthpiece for every horn and player... Finding them is the challenge. With Flugels, I defintely believe this; the right mouthpiece for a flugel can make a tremendous difference. So I have Benge mouthpieces, Marcinkiewicsz, Curry, Reeves, Yamaha, and so on. With trumpets the right mouthpiece is not quite so glaringly obvious, but I still believe it can make a big difference.
I personally believe that a lot of horns are sold not only because the owner and the horn don't match - but that they don't match because the 'best' mouthpiece isn't in the mix.
Again, good news. Keep us informed with the updates. _________________ Jonathan Milam
Trumpets: 18043B, 18043*, 18043 Sterling Silver +, 18037 SterlingSilver+, Benge 4x, Olds: '34 Symphony, '47 Super, '52 Recording
Flugle: Strad 182
Puje: American Belle
Cornet: Olds Recording & Super |
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HillBilly Joe Regular Member
Joined: 02 Apr 2010 Posts: 58 Location: Saratoga, NY
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Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2023 3:12 am Post subject: |
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I found the same thing with all of the XO horns I had tried, 2 different ingrams and a 1602LTR ( I think that's what it was called?). Could never get the D to be anything other than FLAT FLAT FLAT and ditched them. _________________ Joe V
Yamaha 8335 LA Gen II
ACB Doubler Flugelhorn
Manchester Brass Pocket Trumpet
GR 62Z**, ACB TAZF |
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trickg Heavyweight Member
Joined: 02 Jan 2002 Posts: 5698 Location: Glen Burnie, Maryland
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Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2023 4:38 am Post subject: |
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HillBilly Joe wrote: | I found the same thing with all of the XO horns I had tried, 2 different ingrams and a 1602LTR ( I think that's what it was called?). Could never get the D to be anything other than FLAT FLAT FLAT and ditched them. |
Yep - with the standard tuning slide that D sits super low. Those two notes - the D and the B - are the reasons I'm actually kinda shopping for a different trumpet, but I may not have to if the rounded slide corrects the problem. _________________ Patrick Gleason
- Jupiter 1600i, ACB 3C, Warburton 4SVW/Titmus RT2
- Brasspire Unicorn C
- ACB Doubler
"95% of the average 'weekend warrior's' problems will be solved by an additional 30 minutes of insightful practice." - PLP |
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HillBilly Joe Regular Member
Joined: 02 Apr 2010 Posts: 58 Location: Saratoga, NY
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Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2023 4:46 am Post subject: |
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Understandable - I couldn't deal with the olympics required to try to keep those notes close, so I gave up. Why fight with the gear, find something that works with you, not against. The newest fleet of Yamaha custom horns are a nice place to start. I had the new Shew, and the new bergeron, and settled on the bergeron. Had it for a year and half or so, it's the last horn I'll buy. No intonation issues anywhere. _________________ Joe V
Yamaha 8335 LA Gen II
ACB Doubler Flugelhorn
Manchester Brass Pocket Trumpet
GR 62Z**, ACB TAZF |
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claf Regular Member
Joined: 01 Oct 2017 Posts: 49
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Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2023 5:31 am Post subject: |
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trickg wrote: | The other added benefit is that with the tighter backbore of the Bobby Shew Lead, the horn no longer feels quite so tight as it did before. |
The 1600i definitely needs a "tighter" mouthpiece.
Either for classic or commercial, it sounds better with a slightly tighter config that I would use on a bigger trumpet. _________________ Bb: Schagerl James Morrison, Van Laar B7
C: Bach Philadelphia |
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ldwoods Heavyweight Member
Joined: 26 Sep 2004 Posts: 1848 Location: Lake Charles, LA
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Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2023 5:43 am Post subject: |
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FYI, if anyone is interested in getting their own Jupiter Ingram, there is one listed in the marketplace. Looks like the same listing is also on ebay if one doesn't trust marketplace. _________________ Larry Woods
LDWoods |
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trickg Heavyweight Member
Joined: 02 Jan 2002 Posts: 5698 Location: Glen Burnie, Maryland
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Posted: Fri Jun 16, 2023 8:06 am Post subject: |
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ldwoods wrote: | FYI, if anyone is interested in getting their own Jupiter Ingram, there is one listed in the marketplace. Looks like the same listing is also on ebay if one doesn't trust marketplace. |
IMO that's a good price - I also like that it's one of the early models with the fancier engraving on the bell.
I've had mine for a while and it has been a solid trumpet. I posted my story about it a good bit earlier in this thread (I think?) where I sold a Schilke B6 and switched to the 1600I for the main reason of finding a trumpet with tighter slotting. I know some guys really like the B6, but I was all over the place on mine, and the Jupiter made me sound like a better player. It certainly made me a more accurate player! _________________ Patrick Gleason
- Jupiter 1600i, ACB 3C, Warburton 4SVW/Titmus RT2
- Brasspire Unicorn C
- ACB Doubler
"95% of the average 'weekend warrior's' problems will be solved by an additional 30 minutes of insightful practice." - PLP |
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TJTS Regular Member
Joined: 06 Jan 2023 Posts: 85 Location: Indianapolis, IN
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Posted: Sat Jun 17, 2023 8:07 am Post subject: |
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I have one an early model in Silver for sale if anyone is interested. They are indeed really cool horns. Nice full sound and for me it is on the brighter side of the sound spectrum. They blow really even since it isn't a step bore. The horn is surprisingly heavy as well! _________________ Michael | Owner
www.thejazztrumpetstore.com
Vintage Professional Trumpet Store |
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