



🎶 Play light, sound heavy — the future of flugelhorns is here!
The Tromba TF-SL Pro is a professional-grade, ultralight flugelhorn crafted from high-quality ABS plastic, weighing just 1 pound—less than half the weight of traditional brass models. Tuned in Bb with polished silver finish, it delivers a rich, mellow tone suitable for jazz, brass bands, and orchestral settings. Featuring metal-to-metal piston valves, adjustable leadpipe, and removable slides, it offers precise tuning and smooth playability. The package includes a silver-plated mouthpiece, soft carry bag, and cleaning accessories, making it an ideal travel companion and a durable, stylish choice for players of all levels.
| ASIN | B019I3J2I0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #232,975 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #56 in Flugelhorns |
| Brand | Tromba |
| Brand Name | Tromba |
| Color | silver |
| Customer Reviews | 3.6 out of 5 stars 23 Reviews |
| Finish Type | Polished |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00711091385692 |
| Instrument Key | B Flat |
| Item Dimensions | 14 x 8 x 6 inches |
| Item Weight | 1 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Zhengzhou AUCS Co.,Ltd. |
| Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene, Brass, Plastic |
| Material Type | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene, Brass, Plastic |
| Model Name | TF-SL |
| Model Number | TF-SL |
| Style | Professional |
| UPC | 711091385692 |
L**K
Very close to a metal Instrument with near identical tone.
The Tromba flugelhorn was purchased as an option to replace my metal flugelhorn. After comparing the 2 instruments beside some expensive models, I realized that the Tromba easily holds its own as a serious option. As a long-timie industry professional, I stand by this instrument and look forward to playing it among my peers. The valves need a few minutes to work in. Be sure and oil/lube the instrument and work the slides often. Pretty quickly you will be amazed at the quality and tone. Adding the price to this equation makes this a can't-miss deal. Of course I love the weight and feel of the Conn Vintage One, but the Tromba is highly competitive in several regards. I am very happy with this purchase and plan on buying more Tromba instruments for younger *students and charitable academic endeavors. I still love it after owning it for months. The metal-purist naysayers may be suffering from inexperience. You do have to break it in just a bit. If it won't play in tune, that is not the horn's fault-quit complaining and practice. This instrument is incredible.
D**O
Neat horn!
I received a silver Tromba flugel yesterday and, so far, I like it pretty well. It is MUCH lighter than my Kanstul 1525 or Yamaha 631 and it seems to play great and a lot better that the P-Trumpet. The pitch slotting is acceptable in all ranges (although the upper range is a bit squirrely like on many flugels). I spent a little time checking its pitch centers with the tuner on my phone and it seems to do about as well as my Yamaha but not quite as good as the 1525. With the supplied deep-cup mouthpiece, it has the traditional dark flugel timbre although it brightens considerably with a standard cup (cornet) mouthpiece. Tuning is like on other flugels and uses an adjustable leadpipe (4+" adjustment range). All 3 valves have removable slides and there's a finger ring on the 3rd valve slide. An additional slide has been added to the bell pipe just downstream from the 3rd valve but I'm not sure what it does yet. The spit valves look to be well-designed with rubber seals. I like the fact that it has metal-to-metal piston and cylinder surfaces and the valve action is smooth but a little clanky. Might replace the rubber washers under the valve caps with felt ones to quiet things down. The valve springs are encased in the tops of the valves like on my others flugels. In the package I received were the silver flugel, a black soft bag, a metal mouthpiece (silver plated, deep-V copy of a Wick 4FL according to my caliper readings), extra springs, 2 cleaning worm brushes, cloth, and a couple other nondescript items). We'll see how well it blends with the tenor horns and cornets at the next brass band rehearsal.
D**N
It Started Out GREAT
Played the horn a few days and found serious issues with valve intonation. Flugelhorns already have an intonation reputation but maybe the plastic material makes them more prone to pitch problems. At first I bragged to friends how lucky I was my valves were pretty good and avoided the number one complaint about the plastic type horns. But then it happened just like that - the first valve started sticking.... sent it back and ordered the Mendini student line trumpet and WOW what a difference in quality and sound in every aspect of performance and material and it was CHEAPER! Truthfully I really enjoyed the EastRock plastic flugelhorn. Loved the look and how resemble more of the trumpet feel and look. The sound was really nice. Warm and slightly brassy. Great for jazz - just a little more attention to "perfection" and it would blow you away!
G**K
I don’t know how you could give this thing a bad review! Been playing brass for 20 years
Update 4-25-17 Quick update. I now have 2 Tromba horns. This flugel and a red trumpet. I had a problem with my trumpet and so I messaged Tromba via their website. Within a day or so I received a reply from their office manager, Jason and he pretty quickly shipped me the part that I needed. I always appreciate good service! Good job Tromba! What?? I don’t know how you could give this thing a bad review! Been playing brass for 20 years, got recruited to play jazz in a bar band and I didn’t want to use my Getzen or Cortois flugels and risk damaging them in an uncertain environment. Found this and it’s perfect. Sounds great - not that different than the other two even tho it’s plastic. I use a Denis Wick 2FL mouthpiece rather than the one supplied (though that one is metal not bad, just not as deep as the 2FL). I don’t know what the other reviewers here mean when they say it “sounds stuffy etc.” It sounds like a flugelhorn. It sounds great if you play Flugel - that is, darker than a trumpet. It’s as easy to play as my other flugels-responsive, and doesn’t sound like it’s plastic. In fact I got the metallic silver one and it looks just like my silver-plated Getzen. Better actually since it’s not tarnished. I didn’t have the intonation problems some of there others have. The G above C is a little flat compared to the other open notes, but I can easily adjust with for that when playing. Valves are really smooth-I took the time to oil and clean them during the first week. There are no numbers on them so you’ll have to remember where they go. Slides are a little finicky but a liberal application of slide grease let’s me use the 3rd valve trigger to adjust my C# s etc just fine. Bottom line, this is great horn. Sounds great, plays great. Id buy it again if I ever lost it.
A**R
Great for hobbyist, amateur, for fun to try the flugelhorn on a budget.
A lot of fun, plays well, in tune and lightweight. Use mainly for fun, hobby, jazz.. nice low mellow tone. Very skeptical initially, but this horn is a great value for someone who wants to give a flugelhorn a try without breaking the bank.
C**G
Plastic Fantastic!
Tromba instruments have exceeded my expectations in all ways..now have four (metallic red cornet, silver Bb trumpet, metallic black C trumpet, and now silver Bb flugel). Intonation with the proper mouthpiece is good, sound is subtle and dark, valves (after initial breakin frustration) are fast and free, and light weight and durability is fantastic! In comparison with my Phaeton trumpet, Conn Vintage flugel, and Wild Thing cornet- these are my favorite go-to horns. Are they comparable in all ways to a Bach Strad equivalent- no..but at one 20th the price, they're excellent and fun..😁
M**N
Buy a REAL flugelhorn
It looks like a real flugelhorn until you get up close and realize it's cheaply manufactured piece of junk. The valves are stiff and never loosen, almost all notes are out of tune, the gig bag it comes with is cheap, the slides get stuck quite often, but the tone produced by the horn is slightly comparable to a real flugelhorn. In all my 15 years of playing trumpet, I have never come across such a cheaply made product. I would suggest buying it as a gag but then again it's not worth it because it's $250.
D**R
Great bang for your buck
Just received mine today. Excellent horn for the money (<%10 of the cost of a pro horn). Flugels are pitchy. Expect that. And expect to relearn alternate fingering. Their conical bore gives them that dark tone but also reduces the focus of their tonal center. Your embouchure needs to compensate. The included mouthpiece is a quite good - seems mid-sized and relatively freeblowing to me. It helps create a dark, warm tone instead of crisp, trumpet brassiness. I'm still going shopping for another mouthpiece, just to see if there's something even better out there. Make sure you clean the horn thoroughly, keep track of which valve goes where, note the large and small "ears" that guide each valve's placement, and lubricate with a quality lube before playing. I wish they made a 4-valve!
Trustpilot
Hace 2 semanas
Hace 2 semanas