Photos Here:
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![Image](https://i.ibb.co/HX51rbq/IMG-2048.jpg)
![Image](https://i.ibb.co/9HX9sZP/244499237-291502805931688-5635253487887880971-n.jpg)
![Image](https://i.ibb.co/9vw4wkW/244737942-1494755950886758-2028297911956228298-n.jpg)
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I agree 100%. 1971 was a magical year for these horns for some reason. I had another one of that year come through the stable that ROCKED, but was very rough and didn't see it as a great personal horn. But you're right, they had their groove on. Later 70's, early 80's things weren't AS great.the elephant wrote: ↑Wed Oct 27, 2021 4:30 pm I own 186 #6829 (Early March 1971) and 186 #7454 (Mid-November 1971).
Yours was made about one week before my older one (6829), probably in the third or fourth week of February 1971. They are only 112 instruments apart, numerically.
My two horns are excellent (one is exceptional), so yours probably was, too. The people on the production floor during this period really had a groove on and produced some very fine horns. All three of them probably passed through the same sets of hands while being made.
If I needed it and had the cash I would buy this sight unseen just because of this.
The eventual buyer will likely be quite happy, as the base horn is probably very good, the Jinbao bell is a known decent player, and Dan's work is excellent.
Good luck with your sale. Great photos, by the way.
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Southern California area. (will ship).