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Note:  Glenn Cronkhite leather cases in burgundy or British tan have a 10% surcharge due to an increase in leather prices

We carry only high quality cases that we personally use for our work and play. Everyone wants the lightest, toughest, and cheapest case. The best we can offer is a compromise of all three.  But, all our cases are protective and artful, and should last you a long time.  Beware of cases that seem too cheap or too good to be true, because they probably are.  We've seen loads of cases that look great, but they fail in the number one feature of a case: to protect the instrument.  That's why we don't sell those.  Because if you don't have that, you have nothing.  We ask our dear readers to avoid being suspicious of the soft cases by Glenn Cronkhite.  They are much tougher than you might imagine, and are superior to any other soft case out there.  We recommend budgeting 10% or more of the value of your instrument for a case.  And here's a point to remember:  The first repair to your instrument because you bought the cheap case will cost more than the expensive case.  Read on for tips on traveling with your instrument, and for packing it wisely inside its case.  Click the links above to see our offerings for your instrument.

Steve's Helpful Tips For Boarding a Plane With Your Instrument

or

The Guerrilla Guide to a Trombone Vacation

  • Choose a seat that boards relatively early , so you're not the last one getting on a full plane with full overhead bins. This may mean printing out a boarding pass on your computer the night before your flight, at least for Continental, Southwest, and now many others.
  • Carry nothing else on besides your instrument. If your horn is a bit over the regulation size, you don't want to make things more difficult by carrying on a bunch of other crap too. You and your horn and a jacket is enough.  Don't abuse the rules more than you have to.  Simply bend them a bit.
  • Dress professionally and businesslike.  You don't want to look like some derelict slacker stoner dude who might cause a problem.  You want to look like you know what you're doing, and have done this before.  You're a professional, not a weasel.
  • Use a case that has a shoulder strap, and put it over the shoulder that is opposite the ticket taker at the gate. They might not even notice until you get past, and by then they're greeting the next passenger. If you hold the ticket in your right hand to give to the agent on your right side, the case goes over your left shoulder and you casually turn to the right as you go by, to hide the case from full view.
  • Don't expect special treatment just because your instrument is large and expensive. There are a lot of people boarding the plane who paid more for their ticket than you did.
  • If you have the air miles or the cash to upgrade to business class, do it.
  • Carry a copy of the American Federation of Musicians' correspondence with the TSA, here (PDF)  Also, see this article at the TSA website.


If you run into trouble, and face being refused boarding unless you check your priceless horn in its gig bag, BE NICE, and MEMORIZE this:

  1. Tell a very concise sob story: "On the last flight there was no problem", "The last time I had to check it, it sustained $200 damage, and your company would not pay for it", "I fly about 6 weeks a year, and this is the first time anyone has mentioned it", etc... Be concise and calm.  Make something up ahead of time, but keep it short.  George Carlin memorizes his routines; so should you.
  2. Then tell them what you want, also concisely: "I'd like to carry this on and put it in the coat closet (or behind the last bulkhead row, or in the overhead bin), where it will surely fit fine.  It always has.  What kind of plane is this?  737? Oh yeah, it always fits fine.  May I carry it on?"
  3. Then quickly, before you you get an answer, say this, WORD FOR WORD, with lots of eye contact, a big smile, and a flirtatious tone:

"If you can't do it, I'd certainly understand."

<short pause>

"But if you could, I'd REALLY appreciate it."

<short pause>

"Don't get into any trouble now."  

Practice the preceding lines in front of a friend.  Memorize them.  Make this your mantra.  This is your key to success.  Trust me.  I sweet-talked my way out of Lufthansa's 125 Euro excess baggage fee for a giant contrabass trombone case in Frankfurt using this technique.  You see, instead of begging, you're GIVING the power to the gate agent, and they like that.  After all, who doesn't want to be God?  Let them try it out for a while.  It feels good.  You see, they deal with people all day who bitch at them for every crazy reason imaginable.  You want to create the most positive moment of personal interaction in their day.  If you do, everyone wins and goes away feeling good.  And you get what you want.

The goal is to get them to think to themselves, "Get into trouble?  Me?  Of course not.  I can do what I want.  I'm the gate agent.  I can let you on with your horn if I want.  In fact, I'll do it, because you're so nice, and because I can.  I'm the Decider.  I make the decisions." 

Now go practice that again.  It's also excellent for getting out of a speeding ticket.  Remember:  win-win is the only way.

Lastly, if nothing works, you can take another flight or gate check your instrument.  Or just take your horn out of the case, and hand them the case to check, while saying, "Here, you can take this case, and I'll just carry the horn on and wrap it in a blanket."  If you can get a supervisor to listen to you say that and can get them to notice the absurdity, you may still be able to work things out.  But if you still can't, take out your trombone slide, and hand the bell in the case to the agent.  It will probably be fine.  You might also ask to speak to a member of the flight crew, who is more often very relaxed about these things, and they may say, "No problem; it can ride in the cockpit."  Remember, you're the customer, you're paying the money, and you're doing your best to be cool about a difficult situation.  If you have a French horn with a screw bell, offer to carry the flare on and gate check the body.  And the last chance super sneaky tip:  If they say you MUST gate check it, just agree (even offer to gate check it yourself), smile, walk down the ramp to where the strollers and gate check items get dropped off, then just hold onto your horn and walk right by onto the plane.  And buy yourself a cocktail for being such a sneak.  Life is good.

Tips for each instrument

I've carried a lot of trombones through a lot of airports over the last 25 years, and I find it to be a big drag.  My easiest trip was around Asia with Paul Anka for 3 weeks, and I used an old Walt Johnson fiberglass case so I could check it.  I had heard about very crowded and crazy flights around Asia, and didn't want to take a risk with a gig bag.  (As it turns out, everything was much calmer than in the US for sure.)  I packed the horn carefully inside the case with a Best Brass Warm-up Mute, checked it at every ticket counter, and had a leisurely stroll through the airport without dragging some friggin' sarcophagus around with me.  It didn't get lost.  It didn't get damaged.  It was fine.  BTW, if it gets lost, so what?  Either they'll find it, or I'll buy another.  Life goes on.  If I can't play the gig because the airline lost my horn, it's not my fault.  Maybe I'd borrow a horn.  Going to an audition, where I MUST PLAY, is a different animal, but for a tour where cartage is not provided, I do the best I can.  Life's too short to get all worried about this stuff.  I believe you can also look into supplemental insurance, since the airlines deny any responsibility, but I've never bothered.

  • General tips - Put lots of soft padding around your instrument.  Put something inside the bell, like a Styrofoam cone from an art store, a Best Brass Warm-up Mute or an inflatable beach ball. (Beware: Inflatable beach balls are hard to find for about 9 months of the year - plan ahead.)  The bell flare is the most fragile part of your instrument, so you want to support the instrument by the body of the horn and the throat of the bell, not the bell rim.  You want no movement of the instrument inside the case.  It should be tight when the lid is closed.
  • Trumpet - Single or double cases are usually no problem to carry on.  For a triple, try the Glenn Cronkhite TRB-BB, which can squeeze in a Bb, a medium flugel, and a piccolo, and it fits under the set or overhead.
  • French Horn - With a fixed bell, I believe the Glenn Cronkhite old style case is the only way to get one on the plane.  Make sure you have a window seat, and it just barely fits under the seat in front of you, against the outer wall of the plane.  For screw-bell horns, the Cronkhite is the smallest, but the Marcus Bonna MB5 or MB7 should work fine.  If you must check a screw-bell horn in a Bonna case, take out the bell flare and carry it on.  The case is too small to take much baggage handler abuse without denting either the flare or body when all the pieces are in there.  Pro-Tec screw-bell cases look to be too large to carry on, as are Bags of Spain.  But, you can probably check those without much worry.
  • Alto Trombone - These are small enough, that anyone who even notices will just smile at you and secretly mock you for having such a tiny trombone.
  • Small Trombone - Most any small bore trombone can be carried on in a compact case if the gate agents are not Hitlerific.  Try the SKB360, Cronkhite TSG or TTG, Bam Softpack Jazz, MTS, or Walt Johnson.  The Yamaha 697Z is a winner too.  Forget new King or Bach cases.  They look too bulky and are better checked, as they are pretty tough anyway.  I've checked horns with success in a Protec case, a Conn bass trombone case, or in an old King coffin case from the 1940's.  The new Cronkhite two-piece travel case is a best bet too.
  • Large Trombone - Large bore trombones with F-attachment are pushing the limits.  A Cronkhite BTG or Marcus Bonna Lightweight are your best bets for a standard case.  The SKB462 is better checked, as are most other hard cases.  Maybe the Protec 306CT, though it will wear out faster.  No matter, it's pretty cheap to replace.  The Yamaha Xeno case is small enough, and also tough enough to check if you need to.  An excellent new case is the Cronkhite two-piece travel case, which holds the bell and slide in two separate pieces that snap apart.  If questioned, simply take the halves apart, and say, "What, these little bags?  C'mon, it's nothin'."
  • Bass Trombone - You're playing with fire, friend.  I've carried a few on, but it can be dicey.  The Cronkhite two-piece travel case is your best bet.  You may have a chance with his standard BBG if you're feeling lucky and the flight isn't full.  Don't count on it though.  The old style Reunion Blues case with the slide pocket on the outside looks a lot more compact, but it's not nearly as protective for banging around on a tour.  You might sneak on with a Marcus Bonna bass case, as these are pretty compact, and they can also be checked without worry if it doesn't work out.  A very few Yamaha cases can be carried on, including the old compact 612 case, and perhaps the new Xeno models, if they went back to the compact design again.  Any other case should be checked, including Protec, Bam, Conn, Bach, Getzen, Kanstul, and Willson.  Just brace the throat of the bell. Bach cases are the worst.  Make sure your horn is well padded inside.  Some players check their trombone in a Cronkhite bag encased inside a large SKB or similar golf case, with some extra some padding inside.  It's nice to have the hard outer shell golf case for the air travel, and a lightweight soft case for the around-town travel when you arrive.
  • Contrabass Trombone - Check it or mail it ahead.  I've also checked a bell section in a case and carried the slide on with success.  I've also had a slide damaged by contact with one of the trigger paddles after the TSA opened the case and put the horn back in wrong.  Bastards.  Make sure it fits well in the case so there's no question how it goes.
  • Euphonium - I was going to write, "No way, dude", but a few players have carried their euphs on in a Cronkhite bag.  A bell diameter smaller than 12" will help for sure.
  • Tuba - You know you can't carry it on...unless you buy an extra seat for it.  I've done that on a flight from San Jose to Los Angeles.  It was $59 or thereabouts for the extra ticket.  The best way to care for your tuba is to send it ahead via Bax Global, Greyhound, or Amtrak.  You're risking everything if you use UPS, Fedex, or DHL.  If you need to bring it along on the flight and check it, buy a Walt Johnson custom case a few months ahead of time.  They are made to order and take a long to get.  An MTS case will work, but officially MTS does not recommend using these for air travel, so beware.  Yamaha's cases are pretty tough, but even they may wear out prematurely after a few flights.  Miraphone cases can be a problem.  Soloist extraordinaire Oystein Baadsvick travels a lot with his Miraphone Star Light Eb, and he says it's always getting damaged in the Miraphone case.  Some players buy a custom Anvil, A&S, or a similar flight case and put their tuba in a Cronkhite gig bag inside that.  No matter what hard case you use, put something inside the bell, like an inflatable beach ball, so the horn doesn't shift inside the case, resulting in a wrinkled bell flare.  Lots of padding around the horn is essential.  You want no movement inside, to prevent the horn from coming into contact with the inner wall of the case.
  • Saxophones - If you need to bring a tenor and soprano, or an alto and soprano, there is no smaller case than the Cronkhite double sax gig bags.