Armstrong Student Model 103 Open Hole Flute
About the Model 103
The Armstrong headjoint offers players crisp response and ease of playing throughout all registers. Top adjusting screws provide ease of repair and adjustment to keys. Built in Elkhart, Indiana, the Armstrong 103 flute is designed to last and provide a superb playing experience for students.
The Armstrong headjoint offers players crisp response and ease of playing throughout all registers. Open hole keys provide students the ability to develop and progess into a higher level of playing, encourages proper hand position and provides more clarity in tone. Top adjusting screws provide ease of repair and adjustment to keys. Built in Elkhart, Indiana, the Armstrong 103 flute is designed to last and provide a superb playing experience for students.
Silver plated headjoint and body, top-adjusting silver plated mechanism, open hole Y-arm keys, inline G, C foot, molded plastic case.
In 1931, William Teasdale Armstrong, a highly respected craftsman and a C.G. Conn shop foreman, founded his small flute repair shop in Elkhart, Indiana. Word of his skill and uncompromising commitment to quality quickly spread, and it wasn’t long before he was asked to manufacture instruments for professional musicians.
The proud Armstrong heritage passed on to son Edward, who apprenticed under his father and shared his father’s concern for quality. Edward’s concern for quality went well beyond the crafting of professional-level instruments. He recognized a need to provide quality instruments to a rapidly growing number of students and community musicians.
In the 1970s, Armstrong developed a “new” flute scale in conjunction with Albert Cooper. Prior to this new scale, flute makers would correct the tuning of A=435 commonly found on flutes by cutting the end of the headjoint to bring pitch up to A=440. While this served to correct the pitch in the center registers, all other octaves did not play in tune. With the Armstrong and Albert Cooper changes, the headjoint tapers and tone hole locations and dimensions were all redesigned to dramatically improve the performance of the instrument, in what would become today’s 102, 103, and 104 model flute platforms.
In 1984 the Armstrong woodwind company would be sold to King Musical Instruments, which later merged with C.G. Conn in 1985 to form United Musical Instruments (UMI).
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