I now own a mint condition Jakob Winter case which fits an English-style baritone.
For quite a while, I've owned (traded a badly-out-of-tune beautiful-looking Jinbao Yamaha YEP-201 knock-off for it) a YBH-621S.
I've repaired most of the things that have needed to be repaired, but never got it to the finish line because (and this isn't a good reason, but...) its case (per typical milk-jug-plastic-and-styrofoam Yamaha cases) is trashed...
...so - now that I have a REALLY NICE CASE for it - I'll probably finish sticking this instrument back together.
"Retail" (well...Thomann...) for this case is $400 plus (assuming its in Europe) a bwuttlode of shipping:
https://www.thomannmusic.com/jakob_wint ... ritone.htm
My work-in-progress YBH-621S is a (yes...) silver ( )
3+1 NON-compensating config. I've owned the (non-comp.) 3-valve version, and these are really fun to play...so I'll have my B and E a bit better in-tune, a sort-of-OK low E-flat and a pretty good low D available (not that "low range" is what these little things are for, but whatever).Mick Jagger wrote:You can't always get what you want.
Also...These are more like the earlier Besson/B&H baritones (before they decided to make the bells and the bore sizes too large, thus not sounding enough distinctly different from a euphonium).