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yourbrass Heavyweight Member
Joined: 12 Jun 2011 Posts: 3662 Location: Pacifica, CA, USA
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Posted: Sat Mar 30, 2024 12:44 pm Post subject: Getzen Copra-Temp |
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A customer brought me this copper-bell Getzen to service:
What was amazing about the horn was the valve guide mechanism:
The rounded teat shown protruding runs in a race inside the casing, and being rounded it presents much less surface to make noise.
But the other side of the mechanism was what killed me:
A tiny wheel acts as a tensioner to further reduce noise and is held in the brass casing by a steel screw. And indeed, the valves were silent when I got finished. Can you imagine the amount of work that went into doing this?
Horn was 57XXX, don't know how old that would be. _________________ "Strive for tone." -John Coppola
Edwards X-13
ACB MV3C /ACB A1/26 backbore
https://yourbrass.com/ |
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Subtropical and Subpar Heavyweight Member
Joined: 22 May 2020 Posts: 654 Location: Here and there
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Posted: Sat Mar 30, 2024 12:51 pm Post subject: |
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That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! _________________ 1932 King Silvertone cornet
1936 King Liberty No. 2 trumpet
1958 Reynolds Contempora 44-M "Renascence" C
1962 Reynolds Argenta LB trumpet
1965 Conn 38A
1995 Bach LR18072
2003 Kanstul 991
2011 Schilke P5-4 B/G
2021 Manchester Brass flugel |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Jun 2023 Posts: 503
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Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2024 3:53 pm Post subject: |
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Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. _________________ Sub-Optimal Hillbilly Jazz |
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yourbrass Heavyweight Member
Joined: 12 Jun 2011 Posts: 3662 Location: Pacifica, CA, USA
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Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2024 4:38 pm Post subject: |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) _________________ "Strive for tone." -John Coppola
Edwards X-13
ACB MV3C /ACB A1/26 backbore
https://yourbrass.com/ |
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LittleRusty Heavyweight Member
Joined: 11 Aug 2004 Posts: 12699 Location: Gardena, Ca
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Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2024 11:00 pm Post subject: |
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yourbrass wrote: | Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
I thought he was referring to the brace being soldered to the mouthpiece receiver, not the valve guide mechanism. |
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Croquethed Heavyweight Member
Joined: 19 Dec 2013 Posts: 626 Location: Oakville, CT
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 2:48 am Post subject: |
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yourbrass wrote: | I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
I have a Copra-Temp that can't be dated because of the fire, but my valve guide is identical to the one you showed. Interesting, but the valve cap threads are so thin you have to be careful not to cross-thread them. |
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yourbrass Heavyweight Member
Joined: 12 Jun 2011 Posts: 3662 Location: Pacifica, CA, USA
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 6:32 am Post subject: |
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LittleRusty wrote: | yourbrass wrote: | Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
I thought he was referring to the brace being soldered to the mouthpiece receiver, not the valve guide mechanism. |
Yes, but he implied having more than one, and I'm just curious how common this was on these old Getzens. _________________ "Strive for tone." -John Coppola
Edwards X-13
ACB MV3C /ACB A1/26 backbore
https://yourbrass.com/ |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Jun 2023 Posts: 503
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 9:11 am Post subject: |
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yourbrass wrote: | Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
Hang on, a bit.
My horns are not all in one location. However; most of my Getzens are (I think?). And - - they are generally vintage. Some pre-fire, some post-fire.
Will post at another time. Soon, hopefully.
(I'm older now. I forget stuff. PLUS, I have a lot going on.) _________________ Sub-Optimal Hillbilly Jazz |
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LittleRusty Heavyweight Member
Joined: 11 Aug 2004 Posts: 12699 Location: Gardena, Ca
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 1:32 pm Post subject: |
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yourbrass wrote: | LittleRusty wrote: | yourbrass wrote: | Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
I thought he was referring to the brace being soldered to the mouthpiece receiver, not the valve guide mechanism. |
Yes, but he implied having more than one, and I'm just curious how common this was on these old Getzens. |
Sorry about that. I admit knowing you personally and from your posts my interpretation of your post was puzzling. |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Jun 2023 Posts: 503
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 1:47 pm Post subject: |
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yourbrass wrote: | Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
Hello, yourbrass ~
I have accessed five(5) of my vintage Getzen horns. I believe (?) I have a few more, in a remote location, about 125-miles distant, in another state. Unable to get there for a few weeks.
Here we go ....
First up, a trumpet similar to the one you have shown. It is an "Artist Model" with a Sterling Silver bell. Serial #504xx. It has the same feature on the valves that you are showing on that Copra-Temp trumpet.
Next, a Super-Delluxe (American style long-cornet), Serial #653xx.
It has that valve detail/feature as your Copra-Temp trumpet.
Next, a very rare, mint/N.O.S. "Flugel-Bugle", serial #639xx. It has the valve feature.
Next, a very old Model 80 American long-style cornet, serial #55xx, with underslung 3rd-valve throw-ring. It does NOT have that detail on the valves.
Last, another old Model 80 American long-style cornet, serial #68xx (with the underslung 3rd valve throw-ring). Does NOT have the valve feature.
I recall another old (4-digit serial-number) trumpet ... I'm thinking it is a Model 90 (with underslung 3rd-valve throw-ring) trumpet. In far-away storage.
Happy to be of assistance. _________________ Sub-Optimal Hillbilly Jazz |
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Getzen Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Feb 2004 Posts: 1948
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 3:32 pm Post subject: |
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That valve guide system was referred to as “Roller Bearing” valve guides. It was advertised as being “patent pending” although there was never any record of the company filing for a patent.
I’m not certain when the Roller Bearing system started, but every Super Deluxe trumpet and cornet I have ever seen has had them. They are pretty cool, but not all that practical. _________________ Brett Getzen
President
Getzen Company
Follow Getzen on:
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/getzencompany/
Twitter https://twitter.com/GetzenCompany
If you have a question please feel free to email me at brett@getzen.com. |
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Getzen Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Feb 2004 Posts: 1948
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ConnArtist Heavyweight Member
Joined: 20 Mar 2008 Posts: 2833 Location: La-la Land (corner of 13th and 13th)
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 5:52 pm Post subject: |
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I suspect yet another brilliant and well-functioning design that was just too costly to produce at scale for the price point that the market will bear. Many engineered products fall into this category. I suspect the York Feathertouch valves were another one in the trumpet valve category. Amazing valves that live up to their name! But all the extra little bits and parts and machining and assembly time for a pretty small market and only an incremental improvement over existing simpler tech.
But it’s super cool to hold such an interesting piece of well-designed technology such as those Getzen and York valves, eh? _________________ "Stomvi" PhrankenPhlugel w/ Blessing copper bell
1958 Conn 18A cornet
1962 Conn 9A cornet (yes, the Unicorn )
Reynolds Onyx cornet
c. 1955? Besson 10-10 trumpet
1939 Martin Imperial Handcraft “Model 37”
1986 Bach Strad 37 ML |
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Halflip Heavyweight Member
Joined: 09 Jan 2003 Posts: 1991 Location: WI
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 8:26 pm Post subject: |
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ConnArtist wrote: | I suspect yet another brilliant and well-functioning design that was just too costly to produce at scale for the price point that the market will bear. |
Actually, a very experienced tech (might have been Charlie Melk) told me that those roller bearing valve guides were troublesome from a maintenance perspective -- they tended to get dirty or worn somehow so that the valve action became very poor.
I tried a horn with these once, and the valve action was indeed pretty bad.
I'm sure Brett can add a much better-informed clarification on why he said they weren't all that practical. _________________ "He that plays the King shall be welcome . . . " (Hamlet Act II, Scene 2, Line 1416)
"He had no concept of the instrument. He was blowing into it." -- Virgil Starkwell's cello teacher in "Take the Money and Run" |
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ConnArtist Heavyweight Member
Joined: 20 Mar 2008 Posts: 2833 Location: La-la Land (corner of 13th and 13th)
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 8:37 pm Post subject: |
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Halflip wrote: | ConnArtist wrote: | I suspect yet another brilliant and well-functioning design that was just too costly to produce at scale for the price point that the market will bear. |
Actually, a very experienced tech (might have been Charlie Melk) told me that those roller bearing valve guides were troublesome from a maintenance perspective -- they tended to get dirty or worn somehow so that the valve action became very poor.
I tried a horn with these once, and the valve action was indeed pretty bad.
I'm sure Brett can add a much better-informed clarification on why he said they weren't all that practical. |
Hmmm… and here I assumed the extra roller bearing and fancy whatzits meant better performance! Maybe it did for the first week… ha! Well I *do* have the feathertouch valves and can attest to their performance! So perhaps Getzen abandoned their design more for performance failure than cost and complexity. Though complexity tends to increase failure rates without constant attention… something most trumpeters aren’t exactly known for _________________ "Stomvi" PhrankenPhlugel w/ Blessing copper bell
1958 Conn 18A cornet
1962 Conn 9A cornet (yes, the Unicorn )
Reynolds Onyx cornet
c. 1955? Besson 10-10 trumpet
1939 Martin Imperial Handcraft “Model 37”
1986 Bach Strad 37 ML |
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Halflip Heavyweight Member
Joined: 09 Jan 2003 Posts: 1991 Location: WI
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2024 9:07 pm Post subject: |
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ConnArtist wrote: | Well I *do* have the feathertouch valves and can attest to their performance! |
I've got a York Feather Touch Master Cornet (also a York Airflow cornet and trumpet with regular bottom-sprung valves), and the "feathertouch" valves do work pretty well.
I actually saw pictures of a Hawkes & Son "The Clipper" cornet that had bottom-sprung feathertouch (expansion spring) valves! How's that for exotic?
(Someday I'd like to commission a one-off 'ultra York' with an Airflow wrap and bottom-sprung feathertouch valves!) _________________ "He that plays the King shall be welcome . . . " (Hamlet Act II, Scene 2, Line 1416)
"He had no concept of the instrument. He was blowing into it." -- Virgil Starkwell's cello teacher in "Take the Money and Run" |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow Heavyweight Member
Joined: 25 Jun 2023 Posts: 503
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Posted: Thu Apr 04, 2024 3:06 am Post subject: |
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Halflip wrote: | ConnArtist wrote: | Well I *do* have the feathertouch valves and can attest to their performance! |
I've got a York Feather Touch Master Cornet (also a York Airflow cornet and trumpet with regular bottom-sprung valves), and the "feathertouch" valves do work pretty well.
I actually saw pictures of a Hawkes & Son "The Clipper" cornet that had bottom-sprung feathertouch (expansion spring) valves! How's that for exotic?
(Someday I'd like to commission a one-off 'ultra York' with an Airflow wrap and bottom-sprung feathertouch valves!) |
OLDLOU (Lou Van Koevering) sold me his York AirFlow silver cornet.
He was quite the York expert, having worked for a long time at the Grand Rapids works.
He and I became well-acquainted. Swapped several horns between us.
He DID NOT have a high opinion of the FeatherTouch valves. _________________ Sub-Optimal Hillbilly Jazz |
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yourbrass Heavyweight Member
Joined: 12 Jun 2011 Posts: 3662 Location: Pacifica, CA, USA
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Posted: Thu Apr 04, 2024 7:31 am Post subject: |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | yourbrass wrote: | Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: | Subtropical and Subpar wrote: | That first leadpipe brace is pretty wild, too. Don't see that many soldered to the mouthpiece receiver! |
All my Getzen horns have that. |
I'm curious, Man of C.S., how many of your old Getzens have this type of valve guide mechanism? I don't recall seeing it before. (could be my memory!) |
Hello, yourbrass ~
I have accessed five(5) of my vintage Getzen horns. I believe (?) I have a few more, in a remote location, about 125-miles distant, in another state. Unable to get there for a few weeks.
Here we go ....
First up, a trumpet similar to the one you have shown. It is an "Artist Model" with a Sterling Silver bell. Serial #504xx. It has the same feature on the valves that you are showing on that Copra-Temp trumpet.
Next, a Super-Delluxe (American style long-cornet), Serial #653xx.
It has that valve detail/feature as your Copra-Temp trumpet.
Next, a very rare, mint/N.O.S. "Flugel-Bugle", serial #639xx. It has the valve feature.
Next, a very old Model 80 American long-style cornet, serial #55xx, with underslung 3rd-valve throw-ring. It does NOT have that detail on the valves.
Last, another old Model 80 American long-style cornet, serial #68xx (with the underslung 3rd valve throw-ring). Does NOT have the valve feature.
I recall another old (4-digit serial-number) trumpet ... I'm thinking it is a Model 90 (with underslung 3rd-valve throw-ring) trumpet. In far-away storage.
Happy to be of assistance. |
Thanks very much. _________________ "Strive for tone." -John Coppola
Edwards X-13
ACB MV3C /ACB A1/26 backbore
https://yourbrass.com/ |
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yourbrass Heavyweight Member
Joined: 12 Jun 2011 Posts: 3662 Location: Pacifica, CA, USA
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Posted: Thu Apr 04, 2024 7:33 am Post subject: |
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Getzen wrote: | That valve guide system was referred to as “Roller Bearing” valve guides. It was advertised as being “patent pending” although there was never any record of the company filing for a patent.
I’m not certain when the Roller Bearing system started, but every Super Deluxe trumpet and cornet I have ever seen has had them. They are pretty cool, but not all that practical. |
Thank you, Brett, very much.
This horn was pretty clean, so it was a good example of how the system was supposed to work. And thanks for the date, hard to find this type of info.
-Lionel _________________ "Strive for tone." -John Coppola
Edwards X-13
ACB MV3C /ACB A1/26 backbore
https://yourbrass.com/ |
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ConnArtist Heavyweight Member
Joined: 20 Mar 2008 Posts: 2833 Location: La-la Land (corner of 13th and 13th)
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Posted: Thu Apr 04, 2024 11:52 am Post subject: |
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Man Of Constant Sorrow wrote: |
OLDLOU (Lou Van Koevering) sold me his York AirFlow silver cornet.
He was quite the York expert, having worked for a long time at the Grand Rapids works.
He and I became well-acquainted. Swapped several horns between us.
He DID NOT have a high opinion of the FeatherTouch valves. |
The trumpet world lost a massive wealth of knowledge when we lost OLDLOU, may he rest in peace
So did he not like the Feathertouch valves for being a P.I.T.A. to manufacture and optimize before letting out the door? Or did he have qualms about their performance and/or maintenance?
My Feathertouch Master is more of a museum piece that I take care of and tootle once every passing of a comet or so... so the valves are always in perfect order and perform magnificently. Perhaps they're a different story if used daily? _________________ "Stomvi" PhrankenPhlugel w/ Blessing copper bell
1958 Conn 18A cornet
1962 Conn 9A cornet (yes, the Unicorn )
Reynolds Onyx cornet
c. 1955? Besson 10-10 trumpet
1939 Martin Imperial Handcraft “Model 37”
1986 Bach Strad 37 ML |
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