I thought I had? The maker is Carl Geyer.

Thanks for all the suggesions, everyone. I'll see how the horn sits on my hand 
in the next week and hopefully someone around here has a strap I can borrow to 
try that out - since that is probably my only option.

I really like the Schmidt idea, I just wish I knew about the 'reach' of the 
piston valve. Other than that it's a wonderful horn.

-William


 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Steven Mumford <[email protected]>
To: horn <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Jun 4, 2011 5:19 pm
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Schmidt pistons and small hands




    You didn't mention who made the horn, but there's really a lot of 
variation.  If it's a King, all bets are off.  Nobody can feel comfortable with 
those.  It's a little known fact that the head horn designer at King back in 
the 
old days, Mr. Herman M. Sasquatch (the M stands for Munster), was approximately 
11 ft. tall and could palm two basketballs at the same time.  Well, a King 
could 
be made comfortable but they do have an extra extra large grip so it would take 
a little fooling around.   
    I kind of think a lot of the comfort factor is affected by how far in or 
out 
the piston valve is located.  Hmm, how to picture this, I mean if you set the 
horn flat on a table, would the piston valve be closer or farther away from the 
surface of the table?  Often that distance gets messed up if the horn's been 
taken apart and reassembled badly sometime over the years.  I have a real 
Schmidt that I finally ended up kind of resting the piston valve on the palm of 
my hand and reaching around to the finger levers.  The piston valve got moved 
closer to the table in a previous life so otherwise I would have to reach back 
to work it.
    If it's the distance from the finger levers to the top of the piston 
button, 
maybe the finger levers could be bent upward a bit.  See if you can find a spot 
where it feels good to operate the piston valve while just letting your main 3 
fingers fall wherever they feel comfortable.  Your 3rd finger for instance 
might 
be resting on the 2nd valve platter.  If you mess around with that a bit, you 
might be able to come up with a position that feels comfortable, then the horn 
can be changed to fit your hand.  Of course the pinky hook can be moved 
anywhere 
you want.  Do the same thing, find wherever your hand feels good when operating 
the piston, without worrying about valves 1,2,3, then move the pinky hook there.
    A strap probably would be kind of cool too.  To experiment, tie a shoelace 
around the pinky hook or a nearby brace and adjust it to the right length.  
That 
will give you an idea of whether a strap would be helpful.  
    I have a soft spot for Schmidts, but as usual you don't get the real 
Schmidt 
sound unless you have a real Schmidt.  The copies only copy the shape, not the 
playing characteristics.

- Steve Mumford
     
     
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