[Trombone-l] Conn 73H bass trombone questions
philbne@aol.com
philbne at aol.com
Wed Jun 17 00:07:28 CDT 2009
My first bass trombone was a great Elkhart 73H that Larry Minick built a D slide for the original E valve and converted the valves to a below the slide paddle for the D trigger. It was an excellent horn for a doubler or a great big band horn. Had lots of bite to the sound. Wish I'd never sold it. It would be well worth it to have the work done on the paddles and have a D slide made. Many of the parts made for Getzen 1062FD Dependent Bass Trombone D slides would work very well. I had Harry Siverly at The Horn Shop (Fresno CA.) make the same slide for me on a dependent Bach 50B. You plug in the new slide in the original location for the E slide. Since the F slide is on the opposite side of the bell you have plenty of room for the new D slide. Just be aware that it will extend behind the instrument. Make it long enough and wide enough you can have a D slide with pull to Db.
Phil Keen
L.A.
?
-----Original Message-----
From: Frank Doting <slideman59 at att.net>
To: TROMBONE LIST <Trombone-l at samford.edu>
Sent: Tue, Jun 16, 2009 7:34 pm
Subject: [Trombone-l] Conn 73H bass trombone questions
I have recently acquired a very nice original condition Conn 73H bass trombone.
It is the Bb/F/E configuration with the original paddle arrangement. The
questions:
1) Can it be easily converted to the Bb/F/D configuration to be the same as my
Conn 62H?
2) Have some had the paddle setup changed as the double paddle use requires a
lot of pressure.
Although it is a closed wrap instrument, the performance with the F paddle is OK
in my opinion. Comments on this issue?
Regards, Grass Valley Frank
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