![]() ![]() It is so desireable a horn, nobody is gonna be 'taking it' on an open bid auction for under market value, surely. The Selmer will by far attract the most viewers there, and they are hot items so you can either sell it with a fixed price/best offer accepted.or sell it as an open-bid auction. ![]() ![]() Honestly, if you can have them checked by a repair tech, and have the tech provide a written estimate of the work needed.I would sell them on Ebay. eBay sold auctions show ones of similar production year at around the $4000-6000 mark. ![]() Suffice it to say, it's a 'ca-ching' if your desire is to liquidate it. The Mark VI.others can chime in with more accurate estimates than I, as I rarely deal in French Selmers. The Zeph, in playing condition, worth perhaps $900-1000. The Zephyr is actually pre-sweet-spot, meaning it is the iteration of the Zeph which is really just a Voll-True-II (nice horns in and of themselves, BTW).so not as highly sought after as the 'sweet-spot' Zephs which has the Super 20 body specs. Serial number matters on a VI, although ANY VI is still a highly marketable and desireable horn. The Selmer is a Mark VI, arguably the most sought after sax model in the world. ![]()
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