Zane Beck D10 Craigslist-- thoughts?

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Paul Hutzler
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Zane Beck D10 Craigslist-- thoughts?

Post by Paul Hutzler »

I was looking at this ZB D10. Looks like it could be a nice one. if it turns out to be in good condition, do you think its priced fairly?

http://lexington.craigslist.org/msg/4569977249.html
Carter S-10, Shobud D-10, Shobud Pro II D-10, Supro 8 String Lap Steel, Regal Black Lightening Dobro, and Excel D-10 with 10 pickups one for each string, one string for each amp
Paul Sutherland
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Post by Paul Sutherland »

That could be a great deal, depending on the condition of the front of the guitar, which is not shown for some reason, and the functioning of the pedals and levers. $1000 for a D-10 ZB is dirt cheap. Just be prepared for the weight of the guitar.
It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing.
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Richard Sinkler
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Post by Richard Sinkler »

Wow. That is the first ZB I have ever seen where the neck was white, not just the fretboard.
Carter D10 8p/8k, Dekley S10 3p/4k C6 setup,Regal RD40 Dobro, NV400, NV112 . Playing for 53 years and still counting.
Kevin Hatton
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Post by Kevin Hatton »

That guitar is one of the earliest ZB's made 65-66. Not a $2500 guitar in that condition.
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Cartwright Thompson
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Post by Cartwright Thompson »

Kevin Hatton wrote:That guitar is one of the earliest ZB's made 65-66. Not a $2500 guitar in that condition.
Nope, not a $2500 guitar. But for a grand it might be a good deal.
Herb Steiner
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Post by Herb Steiner »

I saw and played what had to be one of the absolute earliest ZB guitars ever!

In 1971, when I lived in Los Angeles, I went into a music store on Lankershim Blvd. in North Hollywood and saw a D-10 CZB-logo guitar, all black. I looked at the guts and it was basically a welded permanent, similar to a Sho-Bud and with a black painted undercarriage. The guitar wasn't in great shape, and since I was the owner of a shiny new SB Professional, I thought it was an obsolete POS and left it at that.

Years later... I never knew Zane, and for some reason never asked Brumley about it. I mentioned the guitar to Greg Jones and he allowed as how he'd heard of a few very early ZB permanent-types but had never seen one. There must have been very few, inded.

Sorry for the hi-jack, back on topic.
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B. Greg Jones
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Post by B. Greg Jones »

Not a bad price at all for that one. I would say 66' to 68'. The earlier ones had a carved neck and the edges on this one aren't. If you can get the serial number to me, I can date the guitar and give the original owner. I have seen 2 other guitars with white necks and fretboards. If I had the cash........

Greg
Ben Elder
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Post by Ben Elder »

Prepare to spend considerable time or money regardless. I just got the second-most unmolested doubleneck of my ignominious ZB career for a great price (in this one's ballpark). I would sooner swim with piranhas than try to work on the underside of a ZB myself, so I had Jim Palenscar ("Here, Jim, you swim with the piranhas...") move the three KLs around and add a fourth (parts included with the guitar.)

Somewhat eerily, the fixup cost was within pennies of being half the purchase price, but that was only because, as Jim told me, "I stopped charging you for labor four hours ago."

The initials ZB stand for "There's no such thing as a free lunch, jocko."

Difficult girlfriends, finicky European sports cars and ZB steels--we love 'em in spite.
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Eric Dahlhoff
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Post by Eric Dahlhoff »

As long as you don't have to move the knee levers, they're really not THAT hard to work on. Just a bit tedious to balance the pulls.
That's really pretty, from the pics. I encourage you to go check it out in person.
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Tom Geldner
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Here's a ZB in So Calif.

Post by Tom Geldner »

$1500 on this one. But the guy won't answer my emails -- not that I really want a ZB because I don't lol.

http://sandiego.craigslist.org/nsd/msg/4584363173.html
Herb Steiner
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Post by Herb Steiner »

Jerry Fessenden used to build guitars for ZB when Brumley lived in TX and had the company here. He's a little mentioned resource for ZB assembly information.

Just sayin', if he's close to any ZB owners. He's living in either Vermont or Indiana, depending.
My rig: Infinity and Telonics.

Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
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