Pete,
I don't have an answer for you, but that's the late and great drummer Randy Hauser in the background. Paul brought Randy to a show we produced near Phila in 1986. Your photo was probably taken in the late 70s.
As far as I can remember, the Pro III's had aluminum necks and the Pro II's had wooden necks. If I remember correctly, Sho-Bud changed to "straight" knee levers and away from the "teardrop" levers (and the long key head with the Pro III's.) I played a Pro III in the late 70's that had aluminum necks, straight knee levers and the shorter key head. Sho-bud was always changing designs.
I don't think they made a Pro III wooden neck as the difference between II and III were the aluminum necks. I have seen Pro II' s with alum necks however. The knee levers look similar to what's on a Franklin? Sr prolly built it while at S~B would be my guess. Looks 75/76 era and straight knees look diff than those made be S~B of late 70's and later. Hopefully Paul will see this and respond.
My guess is a version of, or a Pro II Custom. Looks like a square front to me. As Bas said, with Paul Sr. building guitars at the shop, there is no telling what it was!
A few years ago Paul was hired to do a live recording session on the Faroe Islands near Norway, but are owned by Denmark.
The Sho-Bud was a loaner from someone in Europe, since he didn't want to haul his Franklin PSG to Europe.
Dr. Z Surgical Steel amp, amazing!
"74 Bud S-10 3&6
'73 Bud S-10 3&5(under construction)
'63 Fingertip S-10, at James awaiting 6 knees
'57 Strat, LP Blue
'91 Tele with 60's Maple neck
Dozen more guitars!
Dozens of amps, but SF Quad reverb, Rick Johnson cabs. JBL 15, '64 Vibroverb for at home.
'52 and '56 Pro Amps
Paul's dad, Paul Franklin, Sr. was building ShoBud's at the time, so this may be a special ProIII he built for his son. Man! - look at all the knee levers!
Jack Aldrich
Carter & ShoBud D10's
D8 & T8 Stringmaster
Rickenbacher B6
3 Resonator guitars
Asher Alan Akaka Special SN 6
Canopus D8
GaryL wrote:As far as I can remember, the Pro III's had aluminum necks and the Pro II's had wooden necks. If I remember correctly, Sho-Bud changed to "straight" knee levers and away from the "teardrop" levers (and the long key head with the Pro III's.) I played a Pro III in the late 70's that had aluminum necks, straight knee levers and the shorter key head. Sho-bud was always changing designs.
My Pro-III had aluminum necks, teardrop levers and waffleiron pedals. It may have been a Pro-III Custom, tho.