Another New Yorker
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- David Ball
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- Location: North Carolina High Country
Another New Yorker
Here's a couple of pictures of an old New Yorker I've had for quite some time that I thought some of you National fans might enjoy. Please forgive the dust--it didn't look that bad until I saw it via flash photography! Time to put away the guitars and get some housework done this morning...
Dave
Dave
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- David Ball
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- chris ivey
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- Fred Kinbom
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What a beauty David! I think I have only seen one before with that cool "Electric" flash.
Fred
Fred
www.fredrikkinbom.com - New lap steel album out now - listen here: fredrikkinbom.bandcamp.com/album/songs-for-lap-steel-and-harmonium
- Fred Kinbom
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Wow just noticed that it has no blade pickup at the bridge position! So this must have all hidden pickups, not a "normal" bridge pickup plus two hidden neck pickups like the other 3-pickup 1930s New Yorkers! How does it sound?
Here are my 1937 New Yorkers with a blade bridge pickup and two hidden pickups.
Fred
Here are my 1937 New Yorkers with a blade bridge pickup and two hidden pickups.
Fred
www.fredrikkinbom.com - New lap steel album out now - listen here: fredrikkinbom.bandcamp.com/album/songs-for-lap-steel-and-harmonium
- Laurence Pangaro
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- David Ball
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This one is the only one I've seen with 4 knobs--they all seem to be original equipment (the controls that is, not the knobs themselves since two are obviously replacements). I don't know whether it has two or three hidden pickups, though I imagine it has three--I've never had it apart, but it sounds nice. The pickups aren't particularly strong, but they sound good.
I really love the old Nationals...
Dave
I really love the old Nationals...
Dave
- David Ball
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Fred,
Those are nice looking Nationals! I really wonder if mine originally had a similar cover over the bridge or not. There are a couple of screws that look like they could have held a cover at one time, but there isn't any sign that a cover was ever there. I've always liked the those early hidden pickup guitars.
Dave
Those are nice looking Nationals! I really wonder if mine originally had a similar cover over the bridge or not. There are a couple of screws that look like they could have held a cover at one time, but there isn't any sign that a cover was ever there. I've always liked the those early hidden pickup guitars.
Dave
Re: Another New Yorker
Fred posted a reference to this at our notecannons.com site, and Mark Makin replied with a description of no less than 15 variations on the New Yorker that he has documented!David Ball wrote:Here's a couple of pictures of an old New Yorker I've had for quite some time that I thought some of you National fans might enjoy.
Please take a look at the thread at:
http://michaelmesser.proboards.com/inde ... hread=2958 for Mark's full description of them all. And, if you have a New Yorker and can identify it from Marc's description, please post a picture with comment as to which variation you think you have, and I will add a page to notecannons.
Mahalo,
- Fred Kinbom
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Hi Colin,
What a reply from Mark!
Here are variants 6 and 11:
(1937 variant 6)
(1947 variant 11, with the plain brass fretboard)
Let me know if you want higher resolution pics or I could take new ones if you want from another angle.
Cheers,
Fred
What a reply from Mark!
Here are variants 6 and 11:
(1937 variant 6)
(1947 variant 11, with the plain brass fretboard)
Let me know if you want higher resolution pics or I could take new ones if you want from another angle.
Cheers,
Fred
www.fredrikkinbom.com - New lap steel album out now - listen here: fredrikkinbom.bandcamp.com/album/songs-for-lap-steel-and-harmonium
- David Ball
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hello Dave,
Yes you're right - variation 12. Yours has the wide blue National logo plate not the smaller black and red shield that was around at this time in 1948. Your logo was more usually found on National amps of the time. I think Valco were quite happy to vary the usage of things like that as it suited them!
Yes you're right - variation 12. Yours has the wide blue National logo plate not the smaller black and red shield that was around at this time in 1948. Your logo was more usually found on National amps of the time. I think Valco were quite happy to vary the usage of things like that as it suited them!
Thanks for the pictures! I have started a page at http://notecannons.com scroll down the left menu to Electrics, select "New Yorker Lap steels" and have taken the liberty of using some of these pictures. I have credited the poster by name, and have emailed bob the moderator to say that I am doing this and asking him to confirm that using pictures from this forum is OK with him.
At the bottom of my page I am starting list of forums here which mention the New Yorkers, if I am missing any I'd appreciate a heads up here.
Fred, yes I'd appreciate a few larger jpegs (640 by 480) if possible.
Mahalo!
At the bottom of my page I am starting list of forums here which mention the New Yorkers, if I am missing any I'd appreciate a heads up here.
Fred, yes I'd appreciate a few larger jpegs (640 by 480) if possible.
Mahalo!
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The 1936/37 National sales brochure shows a New Yorker with what seems to be a chrome like finish to the body, and not the usual black/white that most generations of New Yorker had. I have never seen one, I wonder if it was just a sales mock up, or did they actually exist? Have you seen one? Can anyone supply a picture?
- David Ball
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- Joseph Meditz
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- Location: Sierra Vista, AZ
Mine seems to be the 14th version. The serial number is V26457. When I bought this it appeared to have had some repair on the plexiglass fingerboard. Perhaps it warped and was cut in two to relieve it. Where it was cut a metal fret has been inserted. The screws are staggered across at this point. Also, the pair of screws at the octave are on the 13th fret. Nevertheless, the frets are precisely located.
Btw, the tone selector is a pot. It is marked Hawaiin, Chimes and Harp with Chimes being the brightest.
Getting this guitar was a first for me because I like things to be new and pristine. While there were a couple of other NY'ers in the shop that day only this guitar called to me when I picked it up. And I didn't even know how to play it at the time! Lately I've been playing it a lot. Wonderful tone. I just love this axe!
Joe
Btw, the tone selector is a pot. It is marked Hawaiin, Chimes and Harp with Chimes being the brightest.
Getting this guitar was a first for me because I like things to be new and pristine. While there were a couple of other NY'ers in the shop that day only this guitar called to me when I picked it up. And I didn't even know how to play it at the time! Lately I've been playing it a lot. Wonderful tone. I just love this axe!
Joe