harrisonreed wrote: Thu Feb 26, 2026 4:00 pm
LeTromboniste wrote: Thu Feb 26, 2026 3:52 pm
I agree. I'll take the convenience of taking the horn in the cabin as hand luggage over having to lug around a heavy flight case everyday and twice on Sunday. And I say that as someone who very regularly needs to do both (carry-on when only using my tenor, checked flight case when needing the bass sackbut or both horns). There's just no comparison.
I thought sackbuts were already screw bell instruments, sans flare. They fit into a screw bell case without having to cut them already, right?
I'm not having a go, I just thought we were talking about converting horns you otherwise can't replace into screw bell horns. I wouldn't do that.
I have a modern trombone with a screw-bell, for precisely the purpose of being able to have it as cabin luggage when I need to travel with it. Also, while you're correct that no sackbut has the problem of having a large flare, a bass sackbut slide is 50% longer, and the case can be no shorter than 46", quite a bit longer than any normal trombone case and too long to bring as cabin luggage on virtually any flight.
Half of the time, I'm in an equivalent situation to carrying a screw-bell modern trombone – i.e. cabin baggage, lightweight case I can put on my back and carry around effortlessly both during travel and once at deatination – and the other half, I am in an equivalent situation to carrying a conventional modern trombone in a Tank case – i.e. checked baggage, with risks of it being delayed, in a big and heavy flight case that's really annoying to carry around once at destination, and especially if further travel is required by train or car. And I actually have the advantage over the Tank case scenario that I just slide my normal case inside the flight case (not the instrument itself directly in the flight case), so if I'm staying in the same hotel the whole time and there's not other travel involved, at least I get to carry my instruments normally once I've arrived and just leave the empty flight case at the hotel. With a Tank case (other colleagues use heavy reinforced rifle cases), you're stuck dragging it around all over town on wheels. And if you're traveling within or too Europe, lemme tell you those cobblestone streets are
reeeeallly fun......
I much, much prefer the first situation and so for me, screw-bell was just a no-brainer for my modern trombone.
Edit: sorry there's two parallel threads on the topic of screw-bells so I got mixed up over which thread this was. I just got that you're talking in terms of having a vintage bell cut, so that makes more sense. I think the reality for me would be that if I played mostly modern trombone and had to travel a lot, either my main horn would be screw-bell, or if my main horn were a vintage instrument I don't want to risk cutting I'd leave that horn home when traveling and have a second, screw-bell instrument (or bell section that fits on the same slide) for that purpose.