

- SELMER TRUMPET SERIAL NUMBERS SERIAL NUMBERS
- SELMER TRUMPET SERIAL NUMBERS SERIAL NUMBER
- SELMER TRUMPET SERIAL NUMBERS PRO
E., containing 21,000 square feet of floor space and is expending $40,000 in alterations and installation of equipment for making high grade band instruments. The company has leased for ten years a modern three-story brick building at 2837-53 Prospect Avenue S. Reynolds, decided to locate here because of manufacturing conditions, nearness to supply of raw materials and convenience of distribution of the finished product. The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported in late March of that year that: Another new industry has been located in Cleveland in a transaction reported closed yesterday by Granger Factory Space Brokers, 320 Hippodrome Building. The new company was located at 2845 Prospect Avenue in Cleveland, near the campus of former Fenn College, now Cleveland State University. In early 1936, a few months after his 51st birthday and more than 30 years work at the H.N. The above table was partially constructed based on. It is incorrect for cornets and other instruments.
SELMER TRUMPET SERIAL NUMBERS SERIAL NUMBERS
SELMER TRUMPET SERIAL NUMBERS SERIAL NUMBER
If you're enterprising, you could make a serial number chart.Ġ8-12-2012: Weltklang serial number chart (Excel format).Ġ9-10-2012: Some Ida Maria Grassi serial numberage.Ġ6-06-2012: I created a provisional Dolnet serial number chart several years ago and then lost it. Looks like they had a single serial number system for all instruments.Ġ5-21-2012: I was looking through some of my old stuff and found a "handlist" for Boosey, Distin and Hawkes instruments. Ġ6-13-2011: I'm slowly fixing some of the dead links, but I've got the SML and HN White serial number charts back up.ġ2-18-2011: Found some information on F. If any of the links "die", I'd recommend checking the Internet Wayback Machine at. > I can kinda-sorta figure serial number charts for Dolnet and Hohner, as the former had an M70 model introduced in 1970 and the latter had an anniversary model stamped with the date. > European stencils generally use the same charts as the horns they were stenciled from.
SELMER TRUMPET SERIAL NUMBERS PRO
There are some theories about Pan American serial numbers in comparison to Conn pro horns, but the theories don't always work. > American-made stencils do not have extant serial number charts. > Note that Yamaha serial numbers don't seem to correspond to anything, in particular.

(Before I get overly flamed, I know people will argue that, say, their Mark VII is really a Mark VI, even though it's stamped "Mark VII," but it has a Mark VI serial number. So, if you have a horn that's labeled, "Mark VII," and looks like it's a Mark VII, it's probably a Mark VII, regardless of what the serial number is.

This was often the case with Selmer saxophones, for example. If the serial number chart says that the T-4 was introduced in 1965 (making it up) and you have a horn stamped "T-4" that has a 1963 serial number, it's still a T-4.įinally, some manufacturers released a few "prototype" models before the model became standardized. Sometimes Yanagisawa released the alto model first, sometimes a tenor or a soprano.

As an example, I'm doing some Yanagisawa saxophone research. D," the chart is wrong.Īlso note that sometimes manufacturers release one pitch of a certain horn earlier than other pitches. In the case of SML, if you have a horn that has, "Gold Medal" stamped on the bell and the serial number chart I wrote says it's a "Rev. This can be confusing when the maker doesn't bother giving a name to the model horn you have, like SML. As an easy example, if you look at a serial number chart and it says the serial number is correct for a Selmer Mark VI, but the horn is stamped something completely different, like, "Selmer New York," then you don't have a Mark VI. Serial number charts are a really bad way of determining what model horn you have. I wanted to add this because I keep forgetting to mention this and I get a lot of e-mails about it. I've created a very comprehensive chart with a lot of info at.
