
York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
- arpthark
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York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
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- sugawi (Mon Jun 08, 2026 1:24 pm) • York-aholic (Mon Jun 08, 2026 1:48 pm)
Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
Listed:8 hours ago
Views:15,715
Watchers:91
Offers:18
I have never seen so much excitement about listing.
Views:15,715
Watchers:91
Offers:18
I have never seen so much excitement about listing.
- These users thanked the author sugawi for the post:
- York-aholic (Mon Jun 08, 2026 1:48 pm)
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York-aholic
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Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
Specially for a small bore (.656” bore) sousaphone. That is NOT a .750 bore York. The ferrules on the slide crooks having a “waist” is a give away.sugawi wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2026 1:24 pm Listed:8 hours ago
Views:15,715
Watchers:91
Offers:18
I have never seen so much excitement about listing.
Some old Yorks, Martins, and perhaps a King rotary valved CC
- arpthark
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Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
Same ferrules found on the smaller B&M BBb horns as well. I had a smaller-bore B&M sousaphone that was almost identical.York-aholic wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2026 1:47 pmSpecially for a small bore (.656” bore) sousaphone. That is NOT a .750 bore York. The ferrules on the slide crooks having a “waist” is a give away.sugawi wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2026 1:24 pm Listed:8 hours ago
Views:15,715
Watchers:91
Offers:18
I have never seen so much excitement about listing.
Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
Model 784
"Junior Sousaphone"
24 inch bell, .654 bore, 3 valves
https://www.yorkloyalist.com/bass-pictu ... tification
Same bore as the Model 33, fwiw.
"Junior Sousaphone"
24 inch bell, .654 bore, 3 valves
https://www.yorkloyalist.com/bass-pictu ... tification
Same bore as the Model 33, fwiw.
Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
Must've be relisted because I seem to recall this having been up on reverb for quite awhile, but priced much higher.
I know a lot of folks subscribe to the "bigger is better" philosophy when it comes to sousas but these smaller Yorks play really well and are underrated in my opinion. As already pointed out on this thread, they're essentially a model 33 in sousa-form.
I used to own one some years back. Still had the original case and a replica neck and bits made by Lee Stofer. I still regret letting it go. Lightweight and played a lot bigger than it looked.
*Edit* looks like the neck is not original on this one and the leadpipe/receiver has been replaced to accommodate this neck as well, since it's missing that very distinct neck angle that all the Yorks have.
I know a lot of folks subscribe to the "bigger is better" philosophy when it comes to sousas but these smaller Yorks play really well and are underrated in my opinion. As already pointed out on this thread, they're essentially a model 33 in sousa-form.
I used to own one some years back. Still had the original case and a replica neck and bits made by Lee Stofer. I still regret letting it go. Lightweight and played a lot bigger than it looked.
*Edit* looks like the neck is not original on this one and the leadpipe/receiver has been replaced to accommodate this neck as well, since it's missing that very distinct neck angle that all the Yorks have.
Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
tofu wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2026 8:24 pmNot disagreeing with what you say - but my muni band has a jumbo York. Way back 45 years ago I used to use it when we did parades. We’ve got a set of six matched frosted silver Cleveland White Kings dating from the first one bought by the band back in 1931 and they play great - only used 3-4 times a summer for almost a hundred yearsMartinMan wrote: Mon Jun 08, 2026 6:18 pm
I know a lot of folks subscribe to the "bigger is better" philosophy when it comes to sousas but these smaller Yorks play really well and are underrated in my opinion. As already pointed out on this thread, they're essentially a model 33 in sousa-form.
they’re literally like new - but that York is one great player and sound. Much older me all these years later - just looks admiringly at it hanging on the wall - with our 9 other band owned sousaphones - thinks about all that weight and instead pulls the primo 1250 King with a 24 in gold washed bell from 1931.
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Oh I'm not diminishing how good the larger Yorks are by any means. In fact I had the privilege of playing this one on a gig recently: https://www.tubaforum.net/viewtopic.php?t=14198
They play massive but are indeed heavy as hell.
Very jealous that you had access to a whole fleet of 30s Kings and the monster York. Can't go wrong, there!
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York-aholic
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Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
Agreed. I was very fond of my York 33.
Some old Yorks, Martins, and perhaps a King rotary valved CC
- bloke
- Mid South Music
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Re: York sousaphone in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, $1,750
I cannibalized one of those to build this back in the 90s.

The neck showing is KING.

The neck showing is KING.
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- Casca Grossa (Wed Jun 10, 2026 6:48 am)
