...Gold bell interiors on sousaphones were the "norm" rather than "the exception" on silver plated sousaphones. The reason that most "overhauled" and brand-new satin-silver sousaphones don't have gold bell interiors is because it costs the repair shop or factory an extra $150 or so, and thus folks got accustomed to seeing most satin-silver sousaphones with bright silver (rather than the traditional gold) bell interiors. Most of the "old-old" satin silver sousaphones with their ORIGINAL silver and no gold interiors actually ORIGINALLY had gold interiors that have been buffed down to the silver...Dents/repairs distressed the gold so much that these instruments looked better with the gold removed (by repair shops...but only by qualified N.A.P.B.I.R.T. shops
Once again, opinions are a lot like (_!_)'s.
[ Bloke; I have a question for you. I have an old Holton Sousa bell that has a gold colored interior, and a matt silver outer with bright silver in the decorations areas. Would you guess this be a gold plated interior or the brass plated lacquer? It is still in fairly decent shape, and really don't know what to do with it.
This is all I have from the horn, too bad but the rest went to a landfill before I could find it and save it. Long story, but the short version is that it was liberated from the high school band room back in the early 70's to be covered with paper mache and used on a homecomming float. When the float was torn apart at a cheerleaders house, it was thrown in her dads garage and left there. When I was in high school, (77-79), I saw a photo of 6 of their brass horns that had been taken in ~1963~, and I went on a quest to find them. After looking and calling, searching I was able to find two complete Reynolds Contempora's, and the bell of the Holton. The cheerleaders dad got mad that it was laying in his garage and tossed the main body of the horn just a month or so before I found out where it had been left years before.
Steve























