Kline Steel Guitars
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- David Decker
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- Joined: 10 Dec 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Canton, Ohio, USA
Kline Steel Guitars
Just wondered how many Forum members are playing Kline Steels and where they are located?
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2 Kline U-12's, Evans FET500LV, Webb 6-14E, Evans rack mount system, Peavey Session 500<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by David Decker on 04 June 2002 at 09:00 AM.]</p></FONT>
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2 Kline U-12's, Evans FET500LV, Webb 6-14E, Evans rack mount system, Peavey Session 500<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by David Decker on 04 June 2002 at 09:00 AM.]</p></FONT>
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<FONT SIZE=-1>Here's an idea if you are in the mood
Although it will not say where they are located, for fun you might do a query by putting "Kline" into the query box on the Statistics page here:</FONT> <FONT SIZE=-2>http://www.onlinesteelers.com/stats.html</FONT> <FONT SIZE=-1>on the www.OnLineSteelers.com Directory.
Also, if you check out Ohio and Indiana as states from the main page and then check out the different folks listed at www.OnLineSteelers.com you may pull up several Kline owners that way, as well.
Since not all forum members actually post here, this may asist you in locating some folks you would not otherwise.
Hope this helps!</FONT>
<FONT SIZE=-2> Ann Fabian
Carter Steel Guitars
www.SteelGuitar.com
www.OnLineSteelers.com
www.SteelGuitarINFO.com
www.CarterStarter.com
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<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Ann Fabian on 04 June 2002 at 10:39 AM.]</p></FONT>
Although it will not say where they are located, for fun you might do a query by putting "Kline" into the query box on the Statistics page here:</FONT> <FONT SIZE=-2>http://www.onlinesteelers.com/stats.html</FONT> <FONT SIZE=-1>on the www.OnLineSteelers.com Directory.
Also, if you check out Ohio and Indiana as states from the main page and then check out the different folks listed at www.OnLineSteelers.com you may pull up several Kline owners that way, as well.
Since not all forum members actually post here, this may asist you in locating some folks you would not otherwise.
Hope this helps!</FONT>
<FONT SIZE=-2> Ann Fabian
Carter Steel Guitars
www.SteelGuitar.com
www.OnLineSteelers.com
www.SteelGuitarINFO.com
www.CarterStarter.com
</FONT>
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Ann Fabian on 04 June 2002 at 10:39 AM.]</p></FONT>
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- Richard Sinkler
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I used to have a D10. Bought it in the late 70's and played it until 2 or 3 years ago. I sold it when I bought my Carter. I have to say that the Kline was the best guitar I have owned. Wish Joe was still making guitars. The only thing I didn't like was the limitation on the number of knee levers you could get under the guitar. But outside of that, they are great guitars.
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Carter D10 9p/10k
Richard Sinkler
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Carter D10 9p/10k
Richard Sinkler
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To add to George's comments, Bobby Loveday is a good friend of mine here in Sevierville and loves his Kline U-12, which he has played for the last 12 years and wouldn't trade for anything else! He never played a D-10 so his playing is not compartmentalized but integrated, as Jeff and Joe insist ought to be the case.
- Mike Meese
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As I stated on another post, I have two of them. One is green laquer the other is red mica with a full desert scene air brushed across the front of it. Both are set up exactly alike and both are 87s. If you have a U12 that needs a fretboard, I think Joe still has some of them. He doesn't have any singles left. Jim I'D RATHER BE STEELIN
- steve takacs
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- Location: beijing, china via pittsburgh (deceased)
About 12 years ago I bought a Kline U-12, white formica but did not play it much. Sold it a couple years ago and bought it back last summer. Look forward to playing it again this coming summer when I'm back in the US. I know some guys don't like the looks of them but they look clean to me. If you're a mathematics person, you'd love the math signs on the fretboard. Oh yes, the guitar plays easily, stays in tune, and sounds like, well, a Kline! I'm in China but the steel is in North Dakota.
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- Pat Goodbla
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I used to think I wanted a Kline but they don't hold up to chain saws very well.I saw Jeff Newman cut one in half on the stage one night at the ISGA Convention. Never had to sharpen the blade even once.
Another one of Newmans classic stunts. He and Joe Wright need to put an act together sometime.
Back to the topic. IMHO the Kline was one of the most compact and tight playing guitars of it's day. There probably were earlier keyless models but theirs is the first I can recall seeing. What happened to the company?
FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by louie hallford on 17 June 2002 at 03:44 PM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by louie hallford on 17 June 2002 at 03:53 PM.]</p></FONT>
Another one of Newmans classic stunts. He and Joe Wright need to put an act together sometime.
Back to the topic. IMHO the Kline was one of the most compact and tight playing guitars of it's day. There probably were earlier keyless models but theirs is the first I can recall seeing. What happened to the company?
FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by louie hallford on 17 June 2002 at 03:44 PM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by louie hallford on 17 June 2002 at 03:53 PM.]</p></FONT>
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I have a Kline single 12--four knee levers and one up--four on the floor. I know of one other in MI. A fellow named Klein who Lives in Alpena, MI. I know of two in FL. One belongs to Don Dixon and the other to Joe Kline himself. I winter in FL--near Sebring so I see Joe occasionally. I got mine from Glenn Taylor of Denver, CO. about 3 months ago. Mine has a George L pickup which is a little too hot for my clumsy touch so I get a lot of bar and pick noise. I've gone back to using my Sho-Bud twin twelve for that reason but love the Kline otherwise. It has very smooth, quiet pedal action and as others have said--stays in tune.
Started with no talent--still have most of it.
Jerry Johnston
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Started with no talent--still have most of it.
Jerry Johnston
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I have 2 U12s. One is black formica and the other is orange stained maple. I remember they were the fisrt keyless steel I ever saw at the '76 convention and I didn't like how they looked but I couldn't stop looking. I got smart and bought three of them. The one I sold was a 13 stringer. What a wonderful geerless tuning system Joe Kline made for those guitars. I don't think anyone will ever improve on that. Don
- Willis Vanderberg
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The one that Bobby Cladwell cut in half at Scotty's was made of pine-- but stained to look like Jeff's guitar.
If you ever wanted to know what a pine guitar would sound like... well... Bobby ("I can cut you on your own instrument") strummed a chord or two, and it had no sustain and was very thin.
The fingerboard was painted on. There was no undercarriage. All the pedal rods were hooked into eye-hooks.
Strings got snipped first... then the bolt cutter took out the pedal rods. At that point it was easy to whack it in half with a chain saw, although I must admit, that the idea of a running chainsaw on a stage full of people, gave me a real chill.
It was a really funny act.
And the funniest were those who thought that it was real-- like the horrified lady two seats over who said, "Oh my! He just cut Jeff's guitar in half!"
The FUNNIEST was after the show ay the booth where Joe has the two halves at RIGHT ANGLES to a regular guitar and was talking about it as a real "double neck."
Winnie
If you ever wanted to know what a pine guitar would sound like... well... Bobby ("I can cut you on your own instrument") strummed a chord or two, and it had no sustain and was very thin.
The fingerboard was painted on. There was no undercarriage. All the pedal rods were hooked into eye-hooks.
Strings got snipped first... then the bolt cutter took out the pedal rods. At that point it was easy to whack it in half with a chain saw, although I must admit, that the idea of a running chainsaw on a stage full of people, gave me a real chill.
It was a really funny act.
And the funniest were those who thought that it was real-- like the horrified lady two seats over who said, "Oh my! He just cut Jeff's guitar in half!"
The FUNNIEST was after the show ay the booth where Joe has the two halves at RIGHT ANGLES to a regular guitar and was talking about it as a real "double neck."
Winnie