Old bones lack 2 things: slide lock and bell lock.WC8KCY wrote: ↑Wed Sep 27, 2023 1:37 am Perusing eBay tonight, it seems that most peashooter-era trombones lack a lock ring for securing the bell section to the slide section. I plan on using a stand with whatever trombone I end up with. Having once played a Pan American without a lock ring, it seems to me that the slide section would likely fall off such an instrument if placed on a typical stand, which is a bit of a deal-breaker.
Is this the case with instruments without a lock ring, or am I missing something?
The Olds Ambassador option is lookin' better and better...
Bones without a bell lock are just called "friction fit", where you kind of jam the slide into the bell. And they stay put generally. As long as you don't have any heavy mutes. As long as you assemble it correctly, it won't come apart on a trombone stand.
Bones without a slide lock lack that little finger that holds the slide up for you. If you set up a stand such that the end of the slide is close to the ground, then the end of the slide just rests on the ground. If you pick it up without grabbing the slide brace, yes, it will fall, but the slide won't fall off the horn just being on the stand.
Either way, you can use it with a stand. Just put it together properly and pick it up with a finger around the slide brace.
And I'm not 100% sure of this, but I think the smaller 606 was a 605. That was what my parents rented for me when I was learning.
If you're looking for a bright Dukes of Dixie kind of trombone sound, the 354 is going to give you a fatter sound. Still this may be overthinking things unless you're going to have a bunch of Arthur Pryor historical musicologists in the crowd. Small mouthpiece (and overblowing the hell out of it) will be the key.
The 605 and the ambassador are probably both going to be heavy horns, and heavy is usually a darker sound. Given the choice for brightness, I'd take the 605. But If you could get anything, a 2h would be the real peashooter.