Conn Trombone

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TromboneDreams
Posts: 3
Joined: Apr 27, 2019

by TromboneDreams »

Hello ! This trombone is a straight Conn(director?). I have no information about this model. Can help me with any information possible ? It's a student model ? I put some photos with logo and others signatures series present on trombone .

Photo with slide series is unclear, also in reality is unclear , sorry for that .. series is something like that (H40519?).

Thank you and sorry for bad english !
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TromboneDreams
Posts: 3
Joined: Apr 27, 2019

by TromboneDreams »

User image

User image

User image

I think attachment with photo no work.

Put the photos in another way .
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

A Conn Director will have the word "Director" on the slide near where the mouthpiece goes in. It also has a distinctive engraving with 3 marching men and a "shower" of stars on the bell.

There are actually a number of versions of the Director, which was Conn's Student horn from the mid 1950s to today. It does play well, though and can be used as a jazz horn and especially for gigs where you don't want to risk a good instrument (like Carneval bands or outdoor Christmas caroling).

There should be a model number like 16H, 18H, 20H, 22H, etc. in front of the serial number. The serial number can range from 6 digits (older than 1965) to a letter and 5 digits (1965 to around 1975), two letters and a 6 digit number, and there is a more modern number that I don't know.

If the true serial number is H4xxxx, it probably dates from the late 1960s.

Note that to post pictures and receive Private Messages or have an e-mail listed you need two approved posts. With your next post you will be all set.

I see you have put in a second post and attached pictures that show the word Director as well as the "shower of stars" bell engraving. This is typical of late Elkhart, Indiana production.
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TromboneDreams
Posts: 3
Joined: Apr 27, 2019

by TromboneDreams »

it's like a student model ,no? can estimate year of production ?
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

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TexasTBone
Posts: 81
Joined: Aug 03, 2021

by TexasTBone »

I'm bumping thsi thread because I just picked up a Conn Director that was made in 1960. There is no indication anywhere on the horn I can find to indicate the specific model. My best guess is it's a 14H. Any advice on how to determine the specific model number?
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

[quote="TexasTBone"]I'm bumping thsi thread because I just picked up a Conn Director that was made in 1960. There is no indication anywhere on the horn I can find to indicate the specific model. My best guess is it's a 14H. Any advice on how to determine the specific model number?[/quote]

There is a 6 digit serial number near the bell joint. Just before it should be the model number. Probably 14H or 16H.
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TexasTBone
Posts: 81
Joined: Aug 03, 2021

by TexasTBone »

[quote="BGuttman"]There is a 6 digit serial number near the bell joint. Just before it should be the model number. Probably 14H or 16H.[/quote]
There isn't. It's just the serial number.
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JKno
Posts: 48
Joined: Jul 14, 2022

by JKno »

Mine is to the left of the serno by a bit...

[url=https://ibb.co/g6G2Qh5]User image
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CalgaryTbone
Posts: 1460
Joined: May 10, 2018

by CalgaryTbone »

Sometimes on Conns, the model number is on the slide receiver on the bell section (where you insert the slide into the bell section), right near where you tighten the two parts together.

Jim Scott
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TexasTBone
Posts: 81
Joined: Aug 03, 2021

by TexasTBone »

Nope - There is no model number in either of those locations. There is only a serial number that dates to 1960.

Edit: On further inspection, it looks like the receiver may have been repaired or replaced at some point. It has "Director" stanped on it and the engraving on the bell is right for the Director series. I did manage to find a speadsheet of Conn trombone models and their years of production.

[url]https://cderksen.home.xs4all.nl/ConnTrbHFull.html

If this is accurate, the horn can't possibly be anything other than a 14H.
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tweak4
Posts: 1
Joined: Sep 16, 2022

by tweak4 » (edited 2022-09-16 3:53 p.m.)

Same thing here- I have a Conn that has the 6-digit serial number at the top of one side of the slide, but no model reference there or on the slide receiver. Plus, according to the lists people posted, the serial traces back to the 1920s, but I don't think it's nearly that old. For reference, I've owned this particular horn since I first started back in about 1988. It was used when my parents got it, but I didn't feel like it was especially old.

(Then, there's my wife's first horn, which looks like the same model, but has no serial at all- though I think that was due to a low-budget repair job sometime before she got it)

Were there any significant physical differences between the various models that can be used to identify them in absence of a stamped model number or serial?