• A Few Questions about Serenellini Accordions

    From mizcannon19@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Dan Sheffield on Fri Feb 2 14:00:17 2018
    On Wednesday, June 7, 2000 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Dan Sheffield wrote:
    Hi,

    Does anyone out there have much experience with Sernellini
    Accordions? I'm considering purchasing a Model 214 Button Accordion in
    C#/D. The 214 has 12 bass, 21 buttons, and four reeds on both the treble
    and the bass. Is $1000 or so a decent price to buy this box? How do they play? Is the action fast enough for Irish music? Anyways, any information
    you can provide would be most valuable. Thank you,

    Dan Sheffield
    --
    /------\ Dan Sheffield /------\
    / ***** \ anglo concertina, mandolin, cittern, oboe, / ***** \
    \ ***** / flute, english horn, pipes, whistles, bassoon, \* ***** /
    \______/ glastonbury pipe, clarinet, ocarina, tenor banjo \______/

    I have a very pretty, vintage Serenelli Mayfair piano accordion, circa 1935, which has always been kept in its velvet-lined case. I am considering selling it. Does anyone out there know about these beautiful instruments, possible value & and an avenue
    for selling it? miz@gmail.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From mizcannon19@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Dan Sheffield on Fri Feb 2 13:57:39 2018
    On Wednesday, June 7, 2000 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Dan Sheffield wrote:
    Hi,

    Does anyone out there have much experience with Sernellini
    Accordions? I'm considering purchasing a Model 214 Button Accordion in
    C#/D. The 214 has 12 bass, 21 buttons, and four reeds on both the treble
    and the bass. Is $1000 or so a decent price to buy this box? How do they play? Is the action fast enough for Irish music? Anyways, any information
    you can provide would be most valuable. Thank you,

    Dan Sheffield
    --
    /------\ Dan Sheffield /------\
    / ***** \ anglo concertina, mandolin, cittern, oboe, / ***** \
    \ ***** / flute, english horn, pipes, whistles, bassoon, \* ***** /
    \______/ glastonbury pipe, clarinet, ocarina, tenor banjo \______/

    I have a very pretty, vintage Serenelli Mayfair piano accordion, circa 1935, which has always been kept in its velvet-lined case. I am considering selling it. Does anyone out there know about these beautiful instruments, possible value & and an avenue
    for selling it? miz@gmail.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ike Milligan@21:1/5 to mizcannon19@gmail.com on Sat Feb 3 14:25:38 2018
    On 2/2/2018 4:57 PM, mizcannon19@gmail.com wrote:
    On Wednesday, June 7, 2000 at 3:00:00 AM UTC-4, Dan Sheffield wrote:
    Hi,

    Does anyone out there have much experience with Sernellini
    Accordions? I'm considering purchasing a Model 214 Button Accordion in
    C#/D. The 214 has 12 bass, 21 buttons, and four reeds on both the treble
    and the bass. Is $1000 or so a decent price to buy this box? How do they
    play? Is the action fast enough for Irish music? Anyways, any information
    you can provide would be most valuable. Thank you,

    Dan Sheffield
    --
    /------\ Dan Sheffield /------\
    / ***** \ anglo concertina, mandolin, cittern, oboe, / ***** \ >> \ ***** / flute, english horn, pipes, whistles, bassoon, \* ***** / >> \______/ glastonbury pipe, clarinet, ocarina, tenor banjo \______/

    I have a very pretty, vintage Serenelli Mayfair piano accordion, circa 1935, which has always been kept in its velvet-lined case. I am considering selling it. Does anyone out there know about these beautiful instruments, possible value & and an avenue
    for selling it? miz@gmail.comi fix up antique accordions from that time period and play them, poccasionally selling one. In unrestored condition it is worth a lot lerss than when it has been restored. Anything that old needs to be overhauled. Think
    about it: A full-sized accordion has more reeds, than a grand piano has strings, yet a grand piano needs to be tuned and serviced every year at least. An accordion though it might not need actual reed tuning, or might depending on how much and how it was
    used, still needs to be eventually maintained just from sitting idle. The more it is played, the more work it will need.
    I fix up antique accordions from that time period and play them,
    occasionally selling one. In unrestored condition it is worth a lot less
    than when it has been restored. Anything that old needs to be
    overhauled. Think about it: A full-sized piano keyboard accordion has
    more reeds, than a grand piano has strings, yet a grand piano needs to
    be tuned and serviced every year at least. An accordion though it might
    not need actual reed tuning, or might depending on how much and how it
    was used, still needs to be eventually maintained just from sitting
    idle. The more it is played, the more work it will need.

    An accordion that age needs at least 20 hours of restoration work to be
    really useful. So unrestored it is probably worth between $100 and $250 depending on a few things that I can't tell without a picture and more information. however, paying to have it restored would likely not
    increase the value more than the cost of having the work done. Also the
    market for restored pre WWII accordions is thin, and to sell a restored
    vintage accordion, you need to know how and whom to sell it to. I can
    get 4 figures for one like over $3000 or half that depending.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)