Does anyone recognize the make of this old lap steel?
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
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Does anyone recognize the make of this old lap steel?
I have this and I'm not sure who makes it. I was wondering if anyone here knows anything about it? Thanks.
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- Richard Sinkler
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- Bill Sinclair
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The knobs and number plates are similar to those seen on many of the Epiphone Electar guitars but nothing else looks like Electar to me. My guess is that it's a one-off by a talented machinist. Knurled knob tuners possibly inspired by (but not the same as) Vegas from that era. Appears to be a fiber and resin construction instead of wood. Very cool. How's it sound?
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That fiber and resin is called Ryertex, a brand name of a phenolic I believe. We used to use it in steel mills on overhead crane electrical boards. They had large contactors mounted on pieces of slate, and if that slate cracked or somehow got busted up we replaced it w a hunk of the Ryertex. Easy enough to work, drill, cut etc...heavy tho. I bet that guitar weighs plenty. Somebody put a lot of work into that build.
How does it sound?
How does it sound?
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Stadler SD-10 Marlen
Yes, you are right. That's the stuff. It weighs 11 pounds 3 ounces. That tuning mechanism is pretty crafty, I've never seen one like it before. It looks like a decent idea as long as you get the length right when you put it on the post. I don't play the steel but I checked it through a Princeton Reverb. The pots needed cleaning, a little deox-it did the job. The tone has a wide range. It would sound better in someone else's hands, but the electronics function as they should. The piece of paper with says FGBDE-GBDEG*High. I know the 2nd one is G6, I'm not sure what the first one is. Anyways, if anyone has a tuning suggestion, I'd go with it. I'll tune it and hopefully have a video of it in a few hours. Thanks for the info and your time.
- Jack Hanson
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Gibson also used similar knobs on its KEH (Kalamazoo Electric Hawaiian) and MEH (Mastertone Electric Hawaiian) prewar budget models. They called it the No. 480.Bill Sinclair wrote:The knobs and number plates are similar to those seen on many of the Epiphone Electar guitars but nothing else looks like Electar to me.
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- Richard Sinkler
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Looking at what original poster said was the tuning on a piece of paper, the F on string 10 giving the dominant 7th, may have been an unwound thin string (based on the smaller slot) placed there to stay out of the way of the strummable G6 chord. Similar to how Buddy Emmons placed the current string 1 F# and string 2 D# in the 9th and 10th string positions on his Sho-Bud when he first added those strings to the E9 pedal steel tuning.Jack Hanson wrote:Interesting the way the bridge appears to be notched for an alternate tuning and its appropriate string gauges.
Carter D10 8p/8k, Dekley S10 3p/4k C6 setup,Regal RD40 Dobro, NV400, NV112 . Playing for 53 years and still counting.