no, a Bb tuba is 36 feet long if uncoiled.
The B flat tuba ... the tubing, if laid out flat would equal about 18 feet in length.
A Bb (B-flat) tenor trombone is nine feet long. That's why it produces a B-flat. Comparitively, a Bb trumpet -- being exactly one octave higher -- is exactly half the length, at 4½ feet.
If you mean if all of the tubing were uncoiled it would be between 12 and 13 feet long.
standard BBb lengths (approximations) Open 18 ft 1st valve 19.07 ft (1.07 ft added) 2nd valve 20.21 ft (2.21 ft added) 3rd Valve 21.41 ft (3.41 ft added) Total length of all tubing (all valves down or the tuba is unraveled) approximately 26.49 ft
The tubing of a tuba typically measures around 15 to 18 feet in length, depending on the specific model and key of the instrument. This extensive tubing allows the tuba to produce deep, resonant tones. The length of the tubing is coiled to make the instrument more compact and manageable for players.
The B flat tuba ... the tubing, if laid out flat would equal about 18 feet in length.
A Bb (B-flat) tenor trombone is nine feet long. That's why it produces a B-flat. Comparitively, a Bb trumpet -- being exactly one octave higher -- is exactly half the length, at 4½ feet.
If you mean if all of the tubing were uncoiled it would be between 12 and 13 feet long.
standard BBb lengths (approximations) Open 18 ft 1st valve 19.07 ft (1.07 ft added) 2nd valve 20.21 ft (2.21 ft added) 3rd Valve 21.41 ft (3.41 ft added) Total length of all tubing (all valves down or the tuba is unraveled) approximately 26.49 ft
The tubing of a tuba typically measures around 15 to 18 feet in length, depending on the specific model and key of the instrument. This extensive tubing allows the tuba to produce deep, resonant tones. The length of the tubing is coiled to make the instrument more compact and manageable for players.
The Contra-bassoon is 18 feet of tubing and can produce a lower pitch than a tuba, but is a rare instrument and I am not 100 percent sure it produces the lowest sound of any musical instrument.
How old is which trombone? Trombones made a hundred years ago are 100 years old. Those made today are called "brand new".This might help: the trombone was developed around the mid-1400s. At the time, it was the only brass instrument to be able to play chromatically, that is all the notes of a scale!
18 cm = 0.59 feet.
18 feet is 216 inches.
3 feet in a yard, so 3*6=18. 18 feet
long a car.
18 feet