Gibson Console Grande-sters Unite!!!
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
- Brad Davis
- Posts: 336
- Joined: 7 Feb 2014 1:13 pm
- Location: Texas, USA
Steve what model is yours? I can't quite make out the pickup.
I think the C-530 was the successor to the Consolette, but it was simply called the Console C-530. Apparently they were sold for about a decade until 1966. The pickups are the same as used on the Electraharp EH-620/630 models. I assume the earlier Consolettes are more rare.
The C-520/523 consoles with the 4-8-4 pickups may have been Gibson's finest creation in the console segment, and they remain underappreciated to this day.
I think the C-530 was the successor to the Consolette, but it was simply called the Console C-530. Apparently they were sold for about a decade until 1966. The pickups are the same as used on the Electraharp EH-620/630 models. I assume the earlier Consolettes are more rare.
The C-520/523 consoles with the 4-8-4 pickups may have been Gibson's finest creation in the console segment, and they remain underappreciated to this day.
- Brad Davis
- Posts: 336
- Joined: 7 Feb 2014 1:13 pm
- Location: Texas, USA
Very nice C.E.C. E. Jackson wrote:GIBSON CONSOLE GRANDE 7-8 STRING U-MAGNET Pu (A/K/A C.C. Pu): c.1939
PROBABLY MY RAREST GIBSON CONSOLE GRANDE
NOTICE THE HYBLUM METAL INSERTS UNDER EACH FRET-BOARD
I looked for one of these for years before finding this one. I don't know how many were shipped by Gibson.
See Duchossior and Gruhn for additional information.
C. E. Jackson
Reading Duchoissor p62 I think yours may be a v.2b from 1940 or later. If he is correct then the earliest v.2a were shipped December 1939 and apparently had a mid-body 3-ply binding, the old Abrams mutes and a gloss instead of matte crinkle finish on the Hyblum metal plate.
- C. E. Jackson
- Posts: 1033
- Joined: 8 Feb 2008 2:45 pm
- Contact:
Brad, you are correct. It is a 1940 rather than a 1939. I have looked back at Gruhn's appraisal dated 2013 and he appraised it as 1940. I have edited the above post to show c.1940.
Also, here is an earlier post on March 30, 2017 where I used the correct date.
1940
Thanks for bringing the error to my attention.
C. E. Jackson
Also, here is an earlier post on March 30, 2017 where I used the correct date.
1940
Thanks for bringing the error to my attention.
C. E. Jackson
My Vintage Steel Guitars
My YouTube Steel Guitar Playlists
My YouTube Steel Guitar Songs
A6 tuning for steels
My YouTube Steel Guitar Playlists
My YouTube Steel Guitar Songs
A6 tuning for steels
- John Rosett
- Posts: 1202
- Joined: 23 Sep 2004 12:01 am
- Location: Missoula, MT
- George Rout
- Posts: 1548
- Joined: 28 Oct 2002 1:01 am
- Location: St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada
I'm late getting to this one. I don't know the exact year of my CG. It was bought from Neiforth Radio in Dartmouth in the late 40's early 50's by Len MacDonald a steel player there. When PSG's made it to the spotlight, Len, like so many other interested CG owners, wanted to develop a way to add a pedal to it. You'll see from the 4 pics below, it was a combination of a pedal, an axle, rods, turnbuckles, nuts & bolts, springs, and a yoke. After all that, it didn't work that great. The problem was the tension on one (2nd) string would not quite return to the original note. When one pressed on the pedal, two small poles each with a hole in it through which the 2nd and 3rd string on the outer neck in E Major were raised up to A Major. You could really get a nice Ray Price sound. To prevent over rasing, two bolts with adjustable nuts hit the bottom of the guitar. The strings ran through a thin piece of teflon tubing to save wear (see Pic 4). The yoke was required to allow each string to move independently to a preset tension. To accomplish this, one had to take into consideration, the distance allowed for the pedal when pressed down to get the right tension. If the pedal was too low, it would hit the floor before the action was full out. You had the 2 strings rising with the uplifting poles, and two heavier springs pulling back the strings when the pedal was released. I guess you might say, “it wasn’t engineeredâ€!!!!!!
http://georgerout.com
"I play in the A Major tuning. It's fun to learn and so easy to play. It's as old as the hills....like me"
"I play in the A Major tuning. It's fun to learn and so easy to play. It's as old as the hills....like me"
- Brad Davis
- Posts: 336
- Joined: 7 Feb 2014 1:13 pm
- Location: Texas, USA
- George Rout
- Posts: 1548
- Joined: 28 Oct 2002 1:01 am
- Location: St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Brad for the post. You're correct, it is tastefully done. When you're using springs however, they are in their own engineering field. If the chap who made it had touched base with somebody in the spring business, it would have worked better. I only took it off the guitar recently, I had it on just to "show". It almost worked perfectly, I could give the pedal a kick to make it snap back, but when you're playing you can't be fooling around with that sort of thing. There are just too many variables in it.
Geo
Geo
http://georgerout.com
"I play in the A Major tuning. It's fun to learn and so easy to play. It's as old as the hills....like me"
"I play in the A Major tuning. It's fun to learn and so easy to play. It's as old as the hills....like me"
-
- Posts: 8
- Joined: 8 Jul 2019 8:41 am
- Location: New York, USA
Wobbles on a Console Grande
Hello Steelers,
I have recently returned to the steel after a long absence. I am playing a Gibson Console Grande which I believe dates to about 1952 or so.
I love the thing, and it's in great shape, but it wobbles. It has the screw-in legs, adjustable aluminum. The screw at the end of one leg has worked itself loose, and I am going to epoxy that (just epoxy the screw into the leg, not the leg into the body).
The design of the mount isn't great, and I think if the legs were steel they might be more rigid, but that's not what I have. I'm wondering if anyone has other suggestions on minimizing the wobble.
Or maybe that's what gave Don Helms his sound --
Thanks
John K
I have recently returned to the steel after a long absence. I am playing a Gibson Console Grande which I believe dates to about 1952 or so.
I love the thing, and it's in great shape, but it wobbles. It has the screw-in legs, adjustable aluminum. The screw at the end of one leg has worked itself loose, and I am going to epoxy that (just epoxy the screw into the leg, not the leg into the body).
The design of the mount isn't great, and I think if the legs were steel they might be more rigid, but that's not what I have. I'm wondering if anyone has other suggestions on minimizing the wobble.
Or maybe that's what gave Don Helms his sound --
Thanks
John K
- Bill Sinclair
- Posts: 1545
- Joined: 23 Apr 2014 7:39 am
- Location: Waynesboro, PA, USA
John,
If the epoxy doesn't work, Mark Roeder of Deluxe34 Stands sells chromed steel legs with the 3/8"-16 threads that your console probably has. They aren't listed on his website but if you contact him he can get them for you. $35 each. I had a mixture of steel and aluminum legs and recently purchased a couple of steel legs from him so that I'd have all steel legs. They look good and it just seems like a beefier and more secure setup. Plus, new clutches are nice!
You need to post a picture of your Console on this thread though! Here's another of mine:
If the epoxy doesn't work, Mark Roeder of Deluxe34 Stands sells chromed steel legs with the 3/8"-16 threads that your console probably has. They aren't listed on his website but if you contact him he can get them for you. $35 each. I had a mixture of steel and aluminum legs and recently purchased a couple of steel legs from him so that I'd have all steel legs. They look good and it just seems like a beefier and more secure setup. Plus, new clutches are nice!
You need to post a picture of your Console on this thread though! Here's another of mine:
-
- Posts: 8
- Joined: 8 Jul 2019 8:41 am
- Location: New York, USA
- Erv Niehaus
- Posts: 26797
- Joined: 10 Aug 2001 12:01 am
- Location: Litchfield, MN, USA
If I am not mistaken, Don Helms put different leg flanges on his 3 legged Console Grande and had legs other than the factory ones.
The early legs didn't even screw in, you just stuck them in and gave em a quarter turn, very wobbly.
I bought some leg flanges from Sill Music and plan to put those on my Console Grande, when I get around to it.
Erv
The early legs didn't even screw in, you just stuck them in and gave em a quarter turn, very wobbly.
I bought some leg flanges from Sill Music and plan to put those on my Console Grande, when I get around to it.
Erv
- Andy Schick
- Posts: 449
- Joined: 2 Dec 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Kingston, Ontario, Canada
-
- Posts: 2992
- Joined: 26 May 2005 12:01 am
- Location: Kinston, North Carolina, USA
1959 Gibson Console Grande Gc-523
Forum member Jeff Kearn's old '59 GC-523 is for sale on Reverb right now (it's in fantastic condition (much like Mr. Jackson's), as I know Jeff took great care of it over the years:
https://reverb.com/item/26641743-rare-1 ... e-shipping
They're asking a lot of it ($3,500), but they take serious offers seriously.
https://reverb.com/item/26641743-rare-1 ... e-shipping
They're asking a lot of it ($3,500), but they take serious offers seriously.
Remington Steelmaster S8 w/ custom Steeltronics pickup. Vox MV-50 amplifier + an 1940's Oahu cab w/ 8" American Vintage speaker. J. Mascis Fender Squire Jazzmaster, Hofner Club bass, Ibanez AVN4-VMS Artwood Vintage Series Concert Size Acoustic Guitar. 1920s/30s Supertone Hawaiian-themed parlor guitar. Silvertone parlor guitar.
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: 20 Feb 2021 8:56 am
- Location: Georgia, USA
newbie with a recently acquired Gibson
I've posted about this in another thread.
Just acquired this...can't play it. I want to restore it and try to learn but, I want to do a proper job so that I can sell it if I have to give up.
It's a 3-legger. It's obviously been stripped and refinished VERY BADLY. It all works, though.
Pots are IRC 938 (38th week of 1949)
We have no idea if the blue was the original color
So, is it a CG or is it a Consolette or something else entirely? I have a partner in this venture who is expert at restoring vintage electric guitars but neither of us know much of anything about these beasts.
Just acquired this...can't play it. I want to restore it and try to learn but, I want to do a proper job so that I can sell it if I have to give up.
It's a 3-legger. It's obviously been stripped and refinished VERY BADLY. It all works, though.
Pots are IRC 938 (38th week of 1949)
We have no idea if the blue was the original color
So, is it a CG or is it a Consolette or something else entirely? I have a partner in this venture who is expert at restoring vintage electric guitars but neither of us know much of anything about these beasts.
-
- Posts: 177
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014 8:32 am
- Location: Ontario, Canada
Hello Al no blue was not the original colour either sunburst or blonde...( yours is a Console Grande )...that old steel carefully cleaned up will amaze you when you have it done do not despair about it remember time is all you need no hurry is wanted ...I have had three different ones over the years a 1950 Sunburst that I sold then a 1938 Blonde cleaned up ( with new steel legs installed ).. my present one is a 1948 ...Sunburst it really is pretty much like new only with new steel legs the old tomato stake leg ones are here somewhere..over six hundred beaners for the legs sockets and money exchange and shipping ...feel blessed and nothing else that you have that old girl to slowly bring back to it former glory...these are my favourite steels over anything else out there...Don Helms to me any way was the best steel player that ever played period...best with your adventure...David...
Last edited by David Rattray on 12 Mar 2021 6:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 11
- Joined: 20 Feb 2021 8:56 am
- Location: Georgia, USA
thanks! and WOW!
Your help is greatly appreciated and your instruments are stunning!
- Brooks Montgomery
- Posts: 1674
- Joined: 5 Feb 2016 1:40 pm
- Location: Idaho, USA
I’m the second owner (traded sporting gear for it with an “agent†that was showing it for Darrel in Ketchum, Idaho). I’ve never met Darrel Reed, would love to someday (if he’s still around). He bought the guitar new as a young teenager in, I believe, the early 50’s. The guitar came with badges that he won performing in the fifties.
Last edited by Brooks Montgomery on 3 Mar 2021 1:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
A banjo, like a pet monkey, seems like a good idea at first.
-
- Posts: 177
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014 8:32 am
- Location: Ontario, Canada
Brooks that is sweet...
this is one of the rarest maybe the only one...long arms and a strong back are needed...or perhaps it is two steels a triple and a double ...found this picture a long time back and at that time it was reported to be a five neck...somehow doubt it but imagine if it was a five neck...-..
this is one of the rarest maybe the only one...long arms and a strong back are needed...or perhaps it is two steels a triple and a double ...found this picture a long time back and at that time it was reported to be a five neck...somehow doubt it but imagine if it was a five neck...-..
Last edited by David Rattray on 3 Mar 2021 1:16 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Brooks Montgomery
- Posts: 1674
- Joined: 5 Feb 2016 1:40 pm
- Location: Idaho, USA
-
- Posts: 177
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014 8:32 am
- Location: Ontario, Canada
- Brooks Montgomery
- Posts: 1674
- Joined: 5 Feb 2016 1:40 pm
- Location: Idaho, USA
-
- Posts: 177
- Joined: 13 Feb 2014 8:32 am
- Location: Ontario, Canada
Brooks your triple is an early fifties with those square pickups 54 maybe .?..one similar sold in Toronto area a few years back I looked at it but passed it was expensive and rough nowhere near as nice as yours...cannot remember what they wanted for it age does that to us. ...that old 38 I sold has a sweet tone with the Charlie Christens pickups in it think I spelled those pickups wrong ...Hope he is still with us and making music on it...
Last edited by David Rattray on 12 Mar 2021 6:32 am, edited 2 times in total.