There are many companies that produce brass bells. While they may not all cost the same, the approximate price for a ninety pound brass bell is around $1500.00.
All of the common brass instruments of a band or orchestra, except the trombone, have relatively short mouthpieces, flared bells, and valves. This includes trumpets (and cornets), French horns, euphoniums (and baritone horns), and tubas. The trumpet is the smallest, so it has the shortest mouthpiece. The larger instruments have larger mouthpieces. The bell of a French horn is more flared compared to its tubing before the bell, than other brass instruments. The Sousaphone, a large instrument that is a variation on the tuba but adapted for carrying in a marching band, also has a very large bell, much larger than a tuba's bell. Most trombones have slides instead of valves, but there are some valve trombones. Bugles, natural horns, and older horns that aren't in common use any more, such as the ophicleide, don't have valves, although they have mouthpieces similar to the modern brass instruments, and flared bells.
One BRASS is 100 Square Foot an old measurement genrally used for painting walls
it weights about up to 800 pounds
Piano plates are made of cast iron
Many are expecting him to be like Art Bell, and nobody can replace Art Bell.
nine pound ninety nine.
Brass is sold by the pound as of Friday the 5th the price of Brass was $2 for Red brass and $2.15 for yellow brass.
a pound in the pound store or ninety nine p in the 99p store
Yellow or Red Brass?
my scrap yard gives me a dollar a pound as scrap value here in Austin tx 2012
3.00 per pound but you might get 2.00 for it
A pound !
1.70 per lb
Red or Yellow?
Depends which scrap dealer you go to One paid me .38 cents per pound another was paying 87 cents.NYC has brass "tubing" Yellow brass and RED Brass and each BRASS gets a different amount
one pound or one ounce!, and I'm pretty sure it is the same with feathers.
Depends on how it's shaped... :/