A list member kindly sent me a scan. Part of my answer was:

Looks like the cup and stem were joined by means of a ferrule.

The drawing clearly is by Lanzky-Otto (or by somebody working for him), not by 
Gottfried, as the text is in Swedish, not Danish.

I have a strong suspicion the backbore was predrilled and then reamed into 
shape 
by means of one or two square reamers with the profile of a slim pyramid stub. 
I 
had my own trombone mouthpiece reamed with the larger of two reamers around 
1970. These two reamers had disappeared from the workshop when I looked for 
them 
around 1994. I then found them at our Musikhistorisk Museum in 1996.They had 
together with other old tools been donated, when the workshop was moved in 1981.

Klaus



________________________________
From: Klaus Smedegaard Bjerre <[email protected]>
To: The Horn List <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, March 10, 2011 1:35:34 AM
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Holton Farkas XDC mouthpiece

I don’t have access to the illustrations mentioned. But I wrote the company 
history booklet for the celebration of the I. K. Gottfried company’s 
celebration 

of its second centennial jubilee in 1996. During the research and also through 
my being a customer since 1961, I have seen just about all of the available 
documentation.

The IKG horn mouthpieces that I know of weren’t turned from a blank. The cup 
was 

cut from sheet brass, folded over a mandrel, and soldered together. The rim 
also 

was cut from sheet brass and soldered to the cup. I am not entirely sure about 
the stem, but I seem to remember it was the same piece of brass as the cup. 

Klaus



________________________________
From: William Foss <[email protected]>
To: The Horn List <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, March 10, 2011 1:21:10 AM
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Holton Farkas XDC mouthpiece


From the May 2005 Horn Call:
"Wilhelm Lanzky Otto's mouthpiece made by J.K. Gottfried in Copenhagen; he used 
this mouthpiece his entire career. A copy of this mouthpiece is manufactured by 
the F. Holton company as their model XDC (rim altered). (p.31)"
There is a picture with the dimensions listed also. No word on why the Holton 
company changed the rim.

William Foss

On Mar 9, 2011, at 3:44 PM, [email protected] wrote:

> Wes Hatch probably has more info on this, but my understanding was that the  
> XDC was supposed to be a copy of a Viennese natural horn mouthpiece. My  
> believe is that the rim was too "Americanized" and made to be too round and  
> too thick.

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