Show us your Dickerson (or any MOTS steel)

Lap steels, resonators, multi-neck consoles and acoustic steel guitars

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Rick Aiello
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Show us your Dickerson (or any MOTS steel)

Post by Rick Aiello »

:wink:

My kids got me this little student model MOTS Dickerson for Father's Day ...

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Here's a tune recorded with it ...

https://on.soundcloud.com/q55YLwW1REAeE2q29

:mrgreen:
Last edited by Rick Aiello on 29 Jun 2023 2:24 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Steve Green
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Post by Steve Green »

Here's my dad playing his back in the late 80's or early 90's. It's the first lap steel I ever saw or played. He got it at a pawn shop near the airport in Alexandria, Louisiana. I think he paid $75 bucks for it. In the last 2 pics, that's me accompanying him on piano.
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Bill Groner
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Re: Show us your Dickerson

Post by Bill Groner »

Rick Aiello wrote::wink:

My kids got me this little student model MOTS Dickerson for Father's Day ...

Image


Here's a tune recorded with it ...

https://on.soundcloud.com/q55YLwW1REAeE2q29

:mrgreen:
Sounds Great Ric........good kids too!!!!
Currently own, 6 Groner-tone lap steels, one 1953 Alamo Lap steel, Roland Cube, Fender Champion 40
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Rick Aiello
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Post by Rick Aiello »

All MOTS steels are welcome here ... :mrgreen:
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Noah Miller
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Post by Noah Miller »

Well, if we're opening it up to any MOTS...

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Rick Aiello
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Post by Rick Aiello »

:whoa:

Wow ...
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Andy Volk
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Post by Andy Volk »

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Erv Niehaus
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Post by Erv Niehaus »

I don't have the amp but this is a little Oahu I bought from a Baptist preacher in Colorado.:D
Erv
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Garry Vanderlinde
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Post by Garry Vanderlinde »

Great Kids!
Lots of tone in those old Dickerson MOTS guitars
Here's Dick McIntire pointing out the finer points to Sol Hoopi'i in 1938

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HowardR
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Post by HowardR »

I have one back in NY......I'll have to wait 'till mid July to send you a Dick pic....... :lol:
John Dahms
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Post by John Dahms »

Magnatone family MOTS steels and amps hold a soft spot in my heart. I call them my "Jelly Beans." Here are some of mine:

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1937-8

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Here is one of the early ones (1938) next to one of the last ones (1954 ish).

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I stacked these two to illustrate the difference in the neck profile from an early and later guitar. Maybe they had a problem with warping or breaking and thickened them as a fix.

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Bill Groner
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Post by Bill Groner »

I think you are the winner John! I saw you collection early on in my Lapsteel journey and didn't realize what I was looking at. Fantastic......
Currently own, 6 Groner-tone lap steels, one 1953 Alamo Lap steel, Roland Cube, Fender Champion 40
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Rick Aiello
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Post by Rick Aiello »

:whoa:

I like that '37/'38 one a lot !!
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David Matzenik
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Post by David Matzenik »

The lagoon aqua blue outfits? Ultra-drool!!!
Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother.
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Gene Wilcox
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Post by Gene Wilcox »

My humble submission. I would like to find a matching knob for the missing one. Fantastic sounding P/U :)
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50's Kay 6 string; 40's Oahu; George boards 8 string
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David M Brown
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Post by David M Brown »

Here's one:


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Nioma branded Magnatone.
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Andy Volk
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Post by Andy Volk »

Here's tune on my '52 Magnatone that shows the pure sound of the pickup direct into the computer with just a little reverb and minimal EQ. I think these little guitars are truly underrated.

https://soundcloud.com/aev/loch-lomond- ... steel-solo
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Frank James Pracher
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Post by Frank James Pracher »

Here's a few of mine...

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"Don't be mad honey, but I bought another one"
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Lynn Wheelwright
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Bronson/Dickerson Zypher set

Post by Lynn Wheelwright »

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David Matzenik
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Post by David Matzenik »

This is my Boss Katana modification, inspired by the Dickerson amps. ;-)


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Bill Sinclair
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Post by Bill Sinclair »

So much cool stuff here. Love the grill cloth, David. I'm a little embarrassed to include my butchered Dickerson in this thread. I picked this up super cheap on ebay years ago because someone had cut through the MOTS covering to get to the pickup and then given up. I made the red teardrop pickup plate from a sheet of pickguard material to cover the extensive damage and put in a pickup I had laying around. It was also missing the bridge so I modified a Gretsch (I think) bridge to work. It was also my first experience installing the Stewmac tuner buttons. One thing I love about these guitars is that with the bridge so close to the end, they're physically a lot shorter than most 22.5" scale guitars and don't take up much space in the trunk or overhead bin.

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George Piburn
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Does a Mother of A Toilet Seat Count?

Post by George Piburn »

Does a Mother of A Toilet Seat Count? It has a Horseshoe Pickup (handle).

It features a Super High Intensity Tone pot and a Controlled Resonance Articulation Pot.


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Jack Hanson
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Post by Jack Hanson »

Bill Sinclair wrote:One thing I love about these guitars is that with the bridge so close to the end, they're physically a lot shorter than most 22.5" scale guitars and don't take up much space in the trunk or overhead bin.
Another feature of the Dickerson and Magnatone MOTS instruments is the fact that they're featherweights. I've often wondered if it's balsa hiding underneath that celluloid.
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Frank James Pracher
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Post by Frank James Pracher »

Jack Hanson wrote: Another feature of the Dickerson and Magnatone MOTS instruments is the fact that they're featherweights. I've often wondered if it's balsa hiding underneath that celluloid.
I have quite a few of these and most appear to be pine bodies, one I'm fairly certain is redwood, and another I have is oddly enough maple! I think they used whatever was cheap and on hand for the student models.
"Don't be mad honey, but I bought another one"
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Jack Hanson
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Post by Jack Hanson »

Frank James Pracher wrote:...one I'm fairly certain is redwood...
It's mind boggling to contemplate how many student model bodies could be cut from a mature redwood.
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