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Hello, Chordites.Many parts of the Hohner 48 have changed over the last 80 years: the logos (stamped, engraved or embossed) on the covers; the chord positions; the use of enharmonic spellings of the chords; and the language of the chords on the covers (German spellings, for the German market; or letter spellings for the rest of the world).
Hello, Bill Morris.Thanks for the picture of the three Hohner 48 chord harps.My Hohner #267 forty-eight chord harmonica looks closest to the new (1960s or later) harp in your picture.I've also noticed on the photo that the oldest Hohner 48 chord harp's combs had thinner reed chamber walls than the other more recent models.It's a guess that the thinner walls would produce more resonant chords, and the thicker walls would produce more durability, but less resonance. Is that an accurate statement?John Broecker
Hi, Wally,Any way of making a snap-in-place hinge so I can easily swap my standard bottom rack for my relative-minor rack? Tom
Yes, the whole bottom rack. Bill sold me two, to go with a standard top rack: the first modified to put relative minors directly below the majors, and an original rack with the parallel minors below. I'd like to be able to swap them without using tools.Tom
BTW, the augmented and diminished chords are in the same place on both.Also: the 48 sounds a whole lot better than the Chordet 20.Tom