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Are there trombones with valves?

The valve trombone has been built in every size from alto to contrabass just as a regular slide trombone has, though it is the tenor valve trombone which has seen the most widespread use. The most common valve-trombone has three valves. It plays just like a trumpet (an octave lower).

How much does a valve trombone cost?

Compare with similar items

This item Jupiter 528L Bb Valve Trombone Jupiter 528S Bb Valve Trombone (Silver Plated)
Customer Rating 4.0 out of 5 stars (3) 4.7 out of 5 stars (2)
Price $1,364.00 $1,734.00
Sold By PlayMusic123 PlayMusic123
Instrument Key B Flat Key of Bb

Do trombones have a slide valve or button valves?

Trombones are usually constructed with a slide that is used to change the pitch. Valve trombones use three valves (singly or in combination) instead of the slide.

Do all trombones have slides?

Unlike most other brass instruments, which have valves that, when pressed, alter the pitch of the instrument, trombones instead have a telescoping slide mechanism that varies the length of the instrument to change the pitch. The most frequently encountered trombones are the tenor trombone and bass trombone.

What are the parts of a trombone?

What Are the Different Parts of the Trombone?

  • The Bell. Since the bell is the largest part of the trombone, even those who aren’t familiar with the instrument can probably point out the bell.
  • The Bumper.
  • The Counterweight.
  • The Mouthpiece.
  • The Tuning Slides.
  • The Valve Slides.
  • The Water Key.

What does a sackbut look like?

Unlike the earlier slide trumpet from which it evolved, the sackbut possesses a U-shaped slide, with two parallel sliding tubes, which allows for playing scales in a lower range. In modern English, an older trombone or its replica is called a sackbut.

Do all trombones have a tuning slide?

If we were to look at the history of trombone construction, they did not have a “tuning slide” as we know today. Instead using the handslide bell tenon as a tuning mechanism.

Where do you attach balljoint to a trombone?

Attaches balljoint to linkage arm on the rotor side. Used on Bach rotary valve instruments equipped with metal miniball linkages, including RC180 (rotary trumpet) and trombone models TB200B, 36B, 36BO, 36C, 36CO, 42B, 42BO, 42C, 42CO, 50B, 50BO, 50B2]

What kind of trigger does a Bach trombone use?

Contains parts to convert your Bach trombone’s old clanky ring-and-ball linkage to a modern miniball system. Fits F triggers on 36B, 42B and 45B tenors, as well as 50B single valve basses (original factory closed/standard wrap instruments only). If you have a factory open wrap instrument, see item 122923 instead.

What kind of bearings do you need for a Bach 42 trombone?

Metal miniball rod end bearing ball joint is the swivel used on Bach 42 and 50 series trombones with Infinity Axial Flow and Hagmann valves. Sold as a single bearing. Two required if you plan to replace both ends of the rod.

What kind of Screws do you use on a trombone?

Screw to hold Uniball/Miniball linkage in place. Attaches balljoint to linkage arm on the lever side. Used on Bach rotary valve instruments equipped with metal miniball linkages, including RC180 (rotary trumpet) and trombone models TB200B, 36B, 36BO, 36C, 36CO, 42B, 42BO, 42C, 42CO, 50B, 50BO, 50B2, 50B2O, 50B3, and 50B3O.