The plastic Bundy clarinets are almost indestructablewnazzaro wrote:I got a used Bundy clarinet from a pawn shop for $50, with case.


The plastic Bundy clarinets are almost indestructablewnazzaro wrote:I got a used Bundy clarinet from a pawn shop for $50, with case.
Same thing with the plastic Selmer oboe. My daughter has kept her plastic Selmer 1492 so she doesn't have to bring her wooden one outside when the community band plays outdoors concert. The sound isn't as smooth, but it's fine for what she needs. Then again it IS an oboe, so what difference could it make.TubaTinker wrote:The plastic Bundy clarinets are almost indestructablewnazzaro wrote:I got a used Bundy clarinet from a pawn shop for $50, with case.If it weren't for moths eating the pads they would last forever. I buy and sell a ton of 'em to beginners as well as seasoned players. The pros have expensive clarinets but lots of them also have a plastic Bundy for those nasty outdoor gigs. I sometimes pick them up at rummage sales for as little as $10. I would never advise anyone to buy a $200 1st Act over a repadded Bundy (about the same money). Here's a situation where the imports should be avoided at every cost. Too bad tubas aren't as easy to come by
Yes, there are cheap import flutes with keywork that's all but impossible to work on (soft and breakable).Pippen wrote:Is there a flute equivalent to this? While searching unsuccessfully for baritones I found myself wishing I had inquired about flutes since that's the direction my daughter will likely be going. I checked around on several flute forums but let's say there was...er...vast disagreement on the subject.
That's the rub. When you go the cheapest route, you have already established your highest amount of loss, and on some of these low cost instruments, this can be less than the cost of renting for only a couple of months.If not, the horn can be sold for close to what was paid for it - a free rental, if you will.
...."lowest cost" route, will they end up eating a big loss when they go to resell the instrument?
If most folks really thought like that, the Yugo factory wouldn't have been able to produce enough cars to satisfy consumption.Tubaryan12 wrote:That's the rub. When you go the cheapest route, you have already established your highest amount of loss, and on some of these low cost instruments, this can be less than the cost of renting for only a couple of months.
No, if most thought like that most would drive Hondas.If most folks really thought like that, the Yugo factory wouldn't have been able to produce enough cars to satisfy consumption.
This is exactly how I feel about T.V.s I generally don't repair them at all. I also won't spend more than $300 on one eitherThere's always the matter of repairs--and a lot of these very cheap instruments don't repair very easily. At what point does one elect not to repair a cheaply made item?
Check the auctions. Gemeinhardt SP2 or 4 (silver plated) and SH2's (sterling silver headjoint) usually go for $250 or less. Armstrong, bundy, and Selmer flutes are also good bets. Pads are always an issue with woodwinds so unless the seller can guarantee the pads are OK, save yourself a $150 or so for a repad. Pawn shops around the midwest usually sell descent flutes for under $150. Play it first and again... save some bucks for a repad. But again... putting $250 bucks into a used flute with a repad will put you World's ahead of a 1st Act for the same money. Bright and shiney isn't always a good idea. Beware of flutes that show signs of being bent... even if it's just a mild bend. Tone holes may not be level.Pippen wrote:Is there a flute equivalent to this?
These are very good points, Rick. Short of opening a five-acre BandWorld with unlimited shelf and floor space and 24-hour buyer traffic, local instrument sellers may have these points in mind, consciously or uncounsciously:Rick Denney wrote: . . . . The thing that is not being said is that there is a market for musical instruments at low price points. Why do the music stores leave it to pawn shops to have a good selection of used stuff on hand? Why do they respond only with vinegar to discounters for selling low-price stuff? Why don't they seek out those manufacturers, make deals, and then ADVERTISE? . . . .
Woodwind/Brasswind seems to have some of this figured out. However, they are dealing great volumes of their store brands. Meanwhile.... the local music stores still seem to be depending on their 'once a week' sales to keep them going. Hmmm.... lesseee... do I want to sit on my butt and make 30% of $1,000 once a week... or would I like to get up off my but once in a while and make 10% of $330 ten times a week?Rick Denney wrote:If some of the cheap imports are a reasonable value and others are junk, why aren't those that are a reasonable value available in the local music stores? Why aren't they advertising to the parents of the local school kids?
Well, I found out the answer in Colorado recently. The music stores don't take trade-ins because they have to follow the same rules as pawn shops...get ID, wait X amount of time, etc, before they can re-sell it. So they will take the name of someone wanting to trade an instrument and try to hook them up with someone looking for same. No used brass to be found in music stores in Denver.Rick Denney wrote:Why do the music stores leave it to pawn shops to have a good selection of used stuff on hand?
Cachet, schmachet. The local guitar store, here in the string-loving Appalachian piedmont, has banjos ranging from the Deering Good-Time to high-end banjos whose names I don't even know because I was scared to look. The price spread goes from about $300 to thousands upon thousands. At each price point, they have the best product available. When a customer comes in, they determine their price point, and then try to find out if they quality desires are in line with their price point. This usually requires talking them up a level or two. Then they have a product to offer them.Dean E wrote:1. Not wanting to cannibalize their own sales in a finite market.
2. Not wanting to offer low-priced alternatives to their moderate-to-high end brands. Increasing supply lowers price.
3. Premium prices are commanded by deliberately under-producing products and keeping the supply down. Harley Davidsons and Corvettes are examples. I can charge a higher price for an instrument if customers are willing to be put on a wait list.
4. Cachet. Starbucks gets a higher price for a cup of coffee than White Gristle.
Lessee ... 30% of $1,000 is $300 ... 10% of $330 is $33, times 10 is $330. Would I turn down a 10% raise ($330 vs. $300) just to avoid the various health benefits of rising from my "posteriority complex" twice a day? I don't think so ...bloke wrote:Someone might need to mind their zeros.do I want to sit on my butt and make 30% of $1,000 once a week... or would I like to get up off my but once in a while and make 10% of $330 ten times a week?![]()
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First, let me say that I don’t have a sky is falling mentality when it comes to Chinese horns. Either they will get better or they will be gone. Any repair tech that has worked on late 1960’s Yamaha brass knows how poorly they were designed and the poor quality materials they used. Same with Jupiter in the 1980’s. They got better. That is why Yamaha is the #1 seller and Jupiter is right behind them. The caveat here is these companies have excellent warranties and parts are readily available – not so for many of the Chinese horns, but I suspect we will see a change in that area.TubaTinker wrote: Send 'em to me. I'll work of 'emA lady brough in a Rosetti trumpet a few weeks ago that had sticky valves. An hour with a honing stone and a fine file removing burrs in the guide slots had the horn playing pretty well. It will get 'Little Johnny' through middle school and if he decides to continue playing his parents will probably buy him a better quality horn.
"Destroyed" is pretty close to reality--bottom bows pounded nearly flat, bell rims folded over on themselves, piston valves with holes poked in them.bloke wrote:As a taxpayer, I'm looking at public school children who destroy instruments within one or two years. If they're destroyed after two years, when were they ever (really) "played"?