- YAMAHA SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LIST SERIAL NUMBERS
- YAMAHA SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LIST PRO
- YAMAHA SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LIST PROFESSIONAL
YAMAHA SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LIST PROFESSIONAL
![yamaha saxophone serial number list yamaha saxophone serial number list](https://images.reverb.com/image/upload/s--K7ENWbR8--/f_auto,t_large/v1536522250/ae5etqnoac1pfgbdqxtu.jpg)
475 = Intermediate model, updated version of 52 model.32 = Intermediate model, virtually identical to 52 model.25 is identical to 23, but it has an altissimo F# key. Below is a little chart, where 'x' means 'a number'.
YAMAHA SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LIST SERIAL NUMBERS
These also have serial numbers for a fairly large variety of makes and models.Most Yamaha models are in the form of 'YAS-21'. : I've attached a couple more Boosey and Hawkes documents. If you're enterprising, you could make a serial number chart.Ġ8-12-2012: Weltklang serial number chart (Excel format).Ġ9-10-2012: Some Ida Maria Grassi serial numberage.Ġ6-06-2012: I created a provisional Dolnet serial number chart several years ago and then lost it. Looks like they had a single serial number system for all instruments.Ġ5-21-2012: I was looking through some of my old stuff and found a "handlist" for Boosey, Distin and Hawkes instruments. Ġ6-13-2011: I'm slowly fixing some of the dead links, but I've got the SML and HN White serial number charts back up.ġ2-18-2011: Found some information on F. If any of the links "die", I'd recommend checking the Internet Wayback Machine at. > I can kinda-sorta figure serial number charts for Dolnet and Hohner, as the former had an M70 model introduced in 1970 and the latter had an anniversary model stamped with the date. > European stencils generally use the same charts as the horns they were stenciled from.
![yamaha saxophone serial number list yamaha saxophone serial number list](https://pmwoodwind.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/668462-1.jpg)
YAMAHA SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LIST PRO
There are some theories about Pan American serial numbers in comparison to Conn pro horns, but the theories don't always work. > American-made stencils do not have extant serial number charts. > Note that Yamaha serial numbers don't seem to correspond to anything, in particular. (Before I get overly flamed, I know people will argue that, say, their Mark VII is really a Mark VI, even though it's stamped "Mark VII," but it has a Mark VI serial number. So, if you have a horn that's labeled, "Mark VII," and looks like it's a Mark VII, it's probably a Mark VII, regardless of what the serial number is. This was often the case with Selmer saxophones, for example. If the serial number chart says that the T-4 was introduced in 1965 (making it up) and you have a horn stamped "T-4" that has a 1963 serial number, it's still a T-4.įinally, some manufacturers released a few "prototype" models before the model became standardized. Sometimes Yanagisawa released the alto model first, sometimes a tenor or a soprano. As an example, I'm doing some Yanagisawa saxophone research. D," the chart is wrong.Īlso note that sometimes manufacturers release one pitch of a certain horn earlier than other pitches.
![yamaha saxophone serial number list yamaha saxophone serial number list](https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/2vMAAOSwh61fjQ7J/s-l300.jpg)
In the case of SML, if you have a horn that has, "Gold Medal" stamped on the bell and the serial number chart I wrote says it's a "Rev. This can be confusing when the maker doesn't bother giving a name to the model horn you have, like SML. As an easy example, if you look at a serial number chart and it says the serial number is correct for a Selmer Mark VI, but the horn is stamped something completely different, like, "Selmer New York," then you don't have a Mark VI. Serial number charts are a really bad way of determining what model horn you have. I wanted to add this because I keep forgetting to mention this and I get a lot of e-mails about it. I've created a very comprehensive chart with a lot of info at.