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1970s olds ambassador cornet
1970s olds ambassador cornet







1970s olds ambassador cornet 1970s olds ambassador cornet

Medalist Tenor Trombone | Same as Olds Ambassador, Model A-15 | Body: brass bell, tuning slide and gooseneck nickel silver bracing rectangular “reynolds” counterweight | Slide: brass outer tubes nickel-silver receiver and hand grips | Finish: baked epoxy coating In the 1970s, Olds and Reynolds merged manufacturing lines and the Medalist models were essentially rebranded Olds’ Ambassador models. Medalist Tenor Trombone (with F attachment) | Body: brass bell with nickel silver bracing rotary valve with closed-wrap F attachment | Slide: TBD | Finish: baked epoxy coating Medalist Tenor Trombone | Body: brass nickel silver bracing brass “R” counterweight | Slide: TBD | Finish: baked epoxy coating One of the results of this move is that Olds’ traditional dual-bore trombone design was implemented on many of Reynolds’ student horns, including the Medalist and Emperor models. Medalist Tenor Trombone (with F attachment) | Body: brass bell with nickel silver bracing rotary valve with closed-wrap F attachment | Slide: TBD | Finish: TBDĪfter CMI purchased Reynolds, trombone production was reportedly moved to Olds’ plant in Fullerton, where Reynolds’ horns were produced on separate-but-similar manufacturing lines. Medalist Tenor Trombone | Body: brass nickel silver bracing | Slide: TBD | Finish: TBD

1970s olds ambassador cornet

Medalist trombones made under RMC ownership were actually produced for Reynolds by the E.K. Introduced in 1961 by RMC-Reynolds, the Medalist tenor trombone replaced the Roth model as the low-end student instrument in the catalog.









1970s olds ambassador cornet