Quote from: Johnny_verhoeven on Sep 05, 2007, 03:09AMWe make a lot of stuff for ESA (European Space Agency).
I can bet you Machined on a decent CNC with top cutters and cooling all the pieces are identical. Now I do not think Bach turns their MPC on a 1,000,000 Euro CNC.
I happen to play a Bach 1G I bought in the mid 80's. I just tried a bunch op MPC and that was the one that fitted. I never look at brand or size I just go for comfort and sound.
Bach particularly is...or was in the recent past at the very least, because I have totally given up on them myself until I hear that they have radically improved...a very badly run, the-bottom-line-is-the-ONLY-line company. A couple of years ago I took three brand new Bach 36Bs out of the plastic wrappers in which they were shipped and found all three to be literally unplayable because of valve and slide manufacturing flaws. Plus, when I actually found some that were playable right out of the box they played relatively badly. Mediocre at best. I have flat out given up even TRYING new Bachs. And yet Gary Greenhoe regularly buys Bach parts and assembles truly fine, Mt. Vernon quality horns out of them. The details are what really matter on this level. The details. The original designs were great. It is in the execution of those designs that large companies are presently faltering.
This has been going on for a long time. I once bought a Conn 100H that was made during the Abilene years and eventually gave up on it. I just couldn't seem to make it sound good. Several years later when I was thinking of selling it I noticed a small dent in the gooseneck and brought it to a repairman to have the dent taken out. When we looked inside the gooseneck, we found a lump of solder the size of several melted down BBs in there. My bad. I was MUCH less equipment oriented then. But THEIR bad as well.
This problem is nothing new. Abilene was what? 35 years ago? As soon as large corporations take over designer-run companies, the downhill slide begins. The bigger the corporations and the more the companies are sold and re-sold, the steeper the decline. Only Yamaha has seemed to be able to totally resist this corporate drift, and like the consistency of Japanese car companies, this is simply a result of a healthier working culture. And thus a healthier economic culture.
So it goes today here in Scamerica.
So it goes.
Now...you've a got an assembly line working on relatively large profit margin and fairly complicated horns, and another line churning out m'pces from blocks of brass. On which one are YOU going to put your best available workers and spend the most money on machines, no matter HOW bad the general run may be?
Duh.
Faced with burgeoning Chinese competition, I can only assume that all manufacturers are cutting whatever corners they think that they can afford to cut in an effort to simply stay in business. High end companies will be less affected by this because trombones are still relatively inexpensive compared to almost all other major instruments, but still...inflation being what it is, cutters, cooling and the CNC machines themselves are almost certainly suffering the results of cost cutting.
Let alone the people working the machines.
Bet on it.
I have tried any number of newer m'pces over the past several years, but since I have found NONE of them that absolutely knock my socks off compared to those that I am habituated to playing, I have yet to line up a number of supposedly "identical" ones and blindfold test them. However, I would be VERY surprised if out of say seven I did not consistently pick one or two or three as better than the others.
Why?
Das not my job, hermano.
Maybe Shakespeare was a brass player.
QuoteHORATIO: O day and night, but this is wondrous strange!
HAMLET: And therefore as a stranger give it welcome.
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Shakespeare-Hamlet, Act I, scene V
Yup.
Live wid it.
If possible...turn it to your advantage.
I am.
As far as I am concerned, ALL m'pces are "custom" m'pces until conclusively proven otherwise.
Keep trying them, and like the proverbial infinity of monkeys at an infinity of typewriters, you too shall find a great one.
For YOU.
Have fun...
Later...
S.