![]() If the horn was butchered and the snaps were removed to fit standard pads, take off $200.-ĭisclaimer, those are my own estimates based on recent Reverb and eflay listingsĬlick to expand.Yes, I do, indeed. Unless it is a silver plated or gold plated horn, with silver not adding much to the value but gold (depending on wear) up to maybe $400.- extra. OP, keep in mind that at the time this horn was sold, there was no factory lacquer so whatever you have has been added later. In cosmetically good shape, I'd think $750.- for a standard edition, and maybe $1000.- for a Saltshaker. But if they are set up correctly, the only issue is the split bell, especially in a big band situation where most players are sitting down and your leg/pants get in the way of the tonehole.Īs for the value, they are underrated, definitely not investment or flipping horns but there are differences. ![]() ![]() I honestly don't know why some folks don't like them, probably because there are still so many of them out there and some are in less than perfect shape. That aside, I have a 1924 TT tenor and it is a beast, I love playing it. Click to expand.George has been a bit strange latelyĪttracted to shiny objects and so on.
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