Just looking for info

Build quality is far better than Edwards.castrubone wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 8:53 am I took one out on a trial a couple years ago. One with a red brass bell and yellow slide, basically an 88H style instrument. Build quality seemed fine to me, something close to Edwards quality...but the one I tried had a rotor issue and needed to go back to the factory FWIW. Playing wise it was also fine, but nothing that wowed me enough to justify spending that much money to keep it.
Big +1 here...WGWTR180 wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 12:15 pmBuild quality is far better than Edwards.castrubone wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 8:53 am I took one out on a trial a couple years ago. One with a red brass bell and yellow slide, basically an 88H style instrument. Build quality seemed fine to me, something close to Edwards quality...but the one I tried had a rotor issue and needed to go back to the factory FWIW. Playing wise it was also fine, but nothing that wowed me enough to justify spending that much money to keep it.![]()
I had the good luck of having an Edwards Alessi and a M&W at the same time for some weeks and I played them quite extensively.
Mechanically, maybe. We don't hear with our eyes though. The day I tried everything side by side at ATW, the Edwards Oft model blew everything else in that category out of the water, followed by Rath. M&W didn't register on the Richter scale. The (then) new King 3BF edition blew the small bores out of the water, although the Michael Davis + model was up there. And Shires ran away with the altos, followed by Rath. The new Elkhart 36H was laughably bad, and the Eastlake 36H I had brought with me was up there with the Shires altos -- almost as playable intonation-wise, and just a different sound that somehow feels more like me even though I know the Shires would probably appeal to more people's ears.Crazy4Tbone86 wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 2:36 pm
>>Build quality is far better than Edwards.
I agree on this. When I measured those M&W horns in my shop, everything about the construction was perfect. Handslide....absolutely parallel. Main tuning slide and F-attachment tuning slide......absolutely parallel. It is rare to see a trombone assembled with everything parallel to the .001 inch. That level of detail can really make a difference in how an instrument plays.
Build quality IS very important. Do we hear with our eyes? No but everyone on here will have a different opinion on how each instrument plays because we as players are different. Your assessments regarding playability are yours. Others are theirs. All are valid.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 3:30 pmMechanically, maybe. We don't hear with our eyes though. The day I tried everything side by side at ATW, the Edwards Oft model blew everything else in that category out of the water, followed by Rath. M&W didn't register on the Richter scale. The (then) new King 3BF edition blew the small bores out of the water, although the Michael Davis + model was up there. And Shires ran away with the altos, followed by Rath. The new Elkhart 36H was laughably bad, and the Eastlake 36H I had brought with me was up there with the Shires altos -- almost as playable intonation-wise, and just a different sound that somehow feels more like me even though I know the Shires would probably appeal to more people's ears.Crazy4Tbone86 wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 2:36 pm
>>Build quality is far better than Edwards.
I agree on this. When I measured those M&W horns in my shop, everything about the construction was perfect. Handslide....absolutely parallel. Main tuning slide and F-attachment tuning slide......absolutely parallel. It is rare to see a trombone assembled with everything parallel to the .001 inch. That level of detail can really make a difference in how an instrument plays.
In every case, I'll tell you exactly what the difference was -- you blew into those horns and a lot of beautiful sound came out without a lot of effort. The horns let you feel some feedback. On the M&W, the new Conn's, and Courtois, you felt the horn taking what you put in, but you didn't get anything out.
Who's dissing custom horns? And why can't someone like a certain custom horn and not like another?Fidbone wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 6:24 am Folk that diss custom horns are just BWAAAAAAH![]()
The whole point of a custom instrument is that you CAN find something that will blow everything else out of the water as Harrisonreed keeps saying.
Otherwise pick a tried and tested off the shelf instrument and learn how to play it......![]()
So once again, on this thread, who's dissing custom horns? I'll admit there are certain custom horns I prefer over others yet I do not play one. That's not a diss-it's called personal choice. Correct?
There are slight dissing connotations throughout this thread.
Interesting. The one person you support throughout this entire conversation listed the most instrument makers and mentioned what didn't work for him-actually called an instrument and actually called an instrument "laughingly bad.". As I said it's his opinion that counts only for him. I think you're reading too much into comments here. Other threads-not relevant.