playing flat and sharp notes is easy . it is not different than playng any other notes, you just have to learn the fingering. for instance B is played pressing the middle valve. for B Flat press 1st valve. open any trumpet book - its there. you may also find it with other trumpet techniques. Danny Carney - www.playthetrumpet.com
First of all, for those who are very new to the trumpet, only use the oil you can buy in a music store. Never try to use a substitute that you just have lying around the house. Things like vegetable oil and motor oil do not go in a trumpet. Find the point at which the moving part of the valve (the part you push down) meets the body of the trumpet. You should be able to unscrew this part. Lift each valve out one at a time so you don't put them back in the wrong place. Squeeze some oil out of the bottle onto the large part (the part that goes inside the trumpet). You can also squeeze some inside the opening in which the valve would go, if necessary. Replace the valve and screw the top back on. When you replace the valve, you need to be sure that it goes in with the same orientation as when you removed it. Many modern trumpets come with a nice feature which will allow you to twist the valve until it clicks into place. Blow air through the trumpet and move the valve up and down to make sure air always moves through the trumpet. If air movement halts, it means you either put a valve in the wrong opening, or the valve was replaced incorrectly.
If the bugle is in the normal key of B-flat, then the notes played by the bugle correspond to the open notes of the trumpet - no valves pressed down at all. If the bugle is in a different key than the trumpet, you will need to transpose the bugle notes into the key of the trumpet to find which notes to play on the trumpet. After you have done the transposition, it should be the case that the same valve combination can be used for all the bugle notes in that key.
I've traced you asking this question all over the internet and i'm afraid to say it's unlikely that you will get an answer. trumpet serial numbers are batch numbers you have to know who made the instrument before you can use the number to find out when or where the instrument was made.
On the internet...or go to a trumpet professional.
You cant
well look for it if you cant find it then push bottens
Nowhere
suck a trumpet then you will find out. believe me then you will find out
playing flat and sharp notes is easy . it is not different than playng any other notes, you just have to learn the fingering. for instance B is played pressing the middle valve. for B Flat press 1st valve. open any trumpet book - its there. you may also find it with other trumpet techniques. Danny Carney - www.playthetrumpet.com
Serial numbers were not required until 1968.
First of all, for those who are very new to the trumpet, only use the oil you can buy in a music store. Never try to use a substitute that you just have lying around the house. Things like vegetable oil and motor oil do not go in a trumpet. Find the point at which the moving part of the valve (the part you push down) meets the body of the trumpet. You should be able to unscrew this part. Lift each valve out one at a time so you don't put them back in the wrong place. Squeeze some oil out of the bottle onto the large part (the part that goes inside the trumpet). You can also squeeze some inside the opening in which the valve would go, if necessary. Replace the valve and screw the top back on. When you replace the valve, you need to be sure that it goes in with the same orientation as when you removed it. Many modern trumpets come with a nice feature which will allow you to twist the valve until it clicks into place. Blow air through the trumpet and move the valve up and down to make sure air always moves through the trumpet. If air movement halts, it means you either put a valve in the wrong opening, or the valve was replaced incorrectly.
If the bugle is in the normal key of B-flat, then the notes played by the bugle correspond to the open notes of the trumpet - no valves pressed down at all. If the bugle is in a different key than the trumpet, you will need to transpose the bugle notes into the key of the trumpet to find which notes to play on the trumpet. After you have done the transposition, it should be the case that the same valve combination can be used for all the bugle notes in that key.
There is no trumpet fool
I play trumpet and have it if you want it.
I've traced you asking this question all over the internet and i'm afraid to say it's unlikely that you will get an answer. trumpet serial numbers are batch numbers you have to know who made the instrument before you can use the number to find out when or where the instrument was made.
On the internet...or go to a trumpet professional.