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Author Topic:  Who made this?
Cartwright Thompson


Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 1:51 am    
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Any guesses?
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=2384&item=3716981783&rd=1
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Winnie Winston

 

From:
Tawa, Wellington, NZ * R.I.P.
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 3:27 am    
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it certainly does look like an Emmons underneath.
Whoever took the pics has a strange idea of where the pedalboard goes! The pedals did NOT look like Emmons, but more like early '70s Sho-Bud.
No idea otherwise!

JW
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C Dixon

 

From:
Duluth, GA USA
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 5:41 am    
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It is doubtful Emmons built this guitar. While I agree that some parts look like Emmons', close examination shows they are not. As Winnie says, the pedals aren't. Also, the tongue on the knee levers is on the wrong piece. It should be on the folding part rather than the stationary part.

So it is probably a home made PSG, where maybe some Emmons' parts were purchased while others were fabricated using Emmons' parts as the pattern.

But all in all, it does not look bad.

I would not suggest paying over 800 for it in any case.

carl
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Peter

 

Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 7:10 am    
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The guitar is "marked" Capri. Is that an old Ford Capri logo?

------------------
Peter den Hartogh
Emmons 1978 S10-Fender Artist S10-Remington U12
Hilton Volume Pedal-Gibson BR4-Guya "Stringmaster"
MusicMan112RP-Peavy Rage158
My Animation College in South Africa



Roger Shackelton

 

From:
MINNESOTA (deceased)
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 8:07 am    
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The Capri PSG was mentioned in some of Tom Bradshaw's early literature in the 1960s. I seem to recall that the Capri guitar was built somewhere on the east coast.??

Roger
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Fred Shannon


From:
Rocking "S" Ranch, Comancheria, Texas, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 8:51 am    
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I owned a Rickenbacker Standard Guitar called a Capri at one time...early '60's I believe....

fred

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The spirit be with you!
If it aint got a steel, it aint real

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David Doggett


From:
Bawl'mer, MD (formerly of MS, Nawluns, Gnashville, Knocksville, Lost Angeles, Bahsten. and Philly)
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 10:38 am    
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Sure looks like Emmons push/pull parts, except for the necks and pedals.
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Bob Wood

 

From:
Madera, California, USA
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 11:17 am    
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I dunno? The guy who's selling it says he has owned several other Pedal Steel Guitars. If he really did, he'd know how to set the thing (and I use that term loosely) up! Should you trust someone who lies? Not me!

Bob
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Bobby Lee


From:
Cloverdale, California, USA
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 5:28 pm    
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Looks like the Emmons changer.
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basilh


From:
United Kingdom
Post  Posted 9 Apr 2004 6:37 pm    
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and a 'Bolt-on' at that ...seems like an emmons-?hybrid
Baz
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Johnny Harris

 

From:
Texas, USA
Post  Posted 10 Apr 2004 5:32 pm    
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Quote:
I HAVE OWNED SEVERAL PEDAL STEEL GUITARS,SHO-BUDS,DEKLEY AND MSA THIS PEDAL STEEL IS SUPERIOR IN QULAITY,SOUND AND PLAYABILITY

I have just discovered that I have had mine set-up wrong all this time!
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chas smith R.I.P.


From:
Encino, CA, USA
Post  Posted 10 Apr 2004 6:03 pm    
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And it appears to have 9 pedals and not 10 as advertised.
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Harold Parris

 

From:
Piedmont, Alabama USA
Post  Posted 12 Apr 2004 5:00 pm    
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The changer appears to be an Emmons simulation built by Doug Baggett in Decatur, Al in the late sixties and early 70. The pull fingers appear to be Emmons or copies. Baggett called his guitars Baggett Customs though. I don't know where the name Capri came from.
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Larry Clark

 

From:
Herndon, VA.
Post  Posted 13 Apr 2004 6:06 am    
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I had a Mercury Capri in "74". Looks like that script logo was pryed right off the trunk.
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