[COMMERCIAL POST] December Update

Better late than never, eh? :wink:
I had to determine a cutoff point for the Stealth range, because low whistles with brass tubes are just too heavy… a Stealth low D would have been very tiring to play because of the weight.
Since Stealth whistles are intended to be high-enders disguised as cheapies, I think it’s only fitting to limit them to the traditional high G thru Bb range… but without skipping any keys in between.
Journeyman whistles are now available in high Eb thru low F, and low E thru low D should be available some time in the first quarter of 2006.
Please don’t form a lynch mob over the demise of the narrow bore Stealth A… the Journeyman A is a much nicer whistle, and doesn’t have any cross-fingering issues.
Likewise, the Journeyman low G# and G are improvements over the Stealth versions… and they don’t weigh so much.
Thanks to the C&F community for keeping me busy making whistles this year, and I look forward to making lots more in the coming new year!

Will a journeyman eb-c tube fit on a large bore stealth head?

Thanks,

Nate

They could be made to fit by using several wraps of plumbers tape, but the tuning would be off, because the mouthpiece would be a bit too large.
Journeyman Eb - C tubes have a 1/2" bore, which is 1/32" larger than the Stealth E - D, and 1/32" smaller than the Stealth C# - C (and the discontinued wide bore D).