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I've done my research and I've come to the only reasonable conclusion I can find. I don't know why information scraped together probably decades ago on an era nobody cared about anyway is considered gospel, but whatever.
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If you really think that Conn built 273,000 instruments and went from the 14M to the 18M to the 20M all in the span of 12 months and then didn't build saxes at all between 19 then more power to you. Can't do better than that on a used horn.įine. He goes through them and he has a money back guarantee. Get a note to jayeSF here on these pages if you're looking for a reasonably priced used horn. If there's one in great shape for about $250 - $300 its o.k. Mine was in lousy shape and I didn't want to spend $300 - $350 for some pads, adjustments and a couple dent removals so I sold it for small $$. In excellent, rebuilt, tech adjusted they go for as high as $600. In decent shape they're about a $250 - $300 horn. horns - they're actually Director models called Shooting Stars. There's "Mexico" stamped near the thumbrest on the Mexiconns. Mexiconn's do not have CONN USA stamped on the bell. Some horns were Conn USA up to about 1970. Click to expand.Well, it may or not be a "Mexiconn." Its a 1970 built in one of the Nogales plants - either Arizona at the Art Best Plant, or in Mexico.