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My New Sho~Bud Keyheads
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 7:42 am
by John Coop
New Keyhead
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 8:08 am
by Martin Weenick
Thats a beauty Coop !!!!!!
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 8:19 am
by James Morehead
Now you done it, you crossed the line----from "craftsmanship" to "ART"!! Way to go John!!
Send me one!!
James
Keyhead
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 8:20 am
by John Coop
This keyhead is actually flat, square and parralle. Imagine that. On a Sho~Bud ? Coop
Re: Keyhead
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 8:43 am
by James Morehead
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 9:17 am
by Martin Weenick
"flat, square, and parallel ???? Well, so much for the Sho-Bud tone. Gone forever.
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 9:47 am
by Ricky Davis
Absolutly Genious Work.
All of the Sho-bud Designs were great in theory; but poorly constructed.
John Coop has Precisioned the execution of construction of the designs.
This leads to No more inharent problems that the Great Shobud pedal steel had; that you can work around but very tuff to do from one steel to the next.
So when you perfect the design; you are perfecting the total output.
Output in playability; Tuning stability; more vibration of the inharent tone and voice; less tension....and I can think of a list of more things too long to write....
All of Coop's designs and ideas and parts and construction; just enhances every possibility in the shobud delivery.
Ricky
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 11:05 am
by Colby Tipton
John,
That is good news.
I always thought it was me making all
of those "String Buzzing" sounds.
The new gumby head stocks would just about complete the stuff I need for rebuilding my "Bud" along with the rest of my new parts Coop will have for me at Dallas.
Colby
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 11:52 am
by John Billings
STUNNING John! Congratulations on another achievement!
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 12:50 pm
by chris ivey
very pretty.....but i would see that gap on the 5th string tuning machine everyday and it would bug me. fix that and they'll look perfect!
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 2:47 pm
by Bobbe Seymour
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 3:52 pm
by Jeff Hyman
John,
It's a piece of art. If someone were to buy this one piece alone (Gumby), how would you drill the holes to match the holes in the PSG? Is this a standard precise setting, or does it vary from guitar to guitar? If someone did want it drilled, do you offer that service?
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 4:40 pm
by Ken Byng
Hi John - any news on my bits yet?
Ken
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 6:47 pm
by Kevin Mincke
John, are the tuning keys the new smaller Grover 18:1's? Very nice at any rate!! I need an original newer style complete assy for a LKV from your vast array of conversion/pull off collection
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 7:04 pm
by Herb Steiner
I've owned a bunch of Sho~Buds. In fact, I played S~B professionally from 1968 through 1983 when I got my first Emmons PP.
My opinion was that probably over every workbench at the S~B factory was the company's dubious motto "Hey, that's good enough."
What Coop has done is what Ricky said. Raise the bar from "close enough" to "precision."
Great work, John. See you in Dallas.
Posted: 17 Feb 2008 9:20 pm
by Andy Sandoval
That's some beautiful work there John.
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 4:57 am
by Ken Byng
Interesting that the rollers don't appear to be guaged.
I take it that the head is milled as opposed to cast.
Sho-bud key heads
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 9:27 am
by Steven Black
That looks great John, I may need to send my sho-Bud pro III back to you for these new key heads, how much do they cost?
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 11:05 am
by Mark Eaton
Forget about putting them on a steel guitar - I can see it decorating a coffee table in a photo shoot for
Architectural Digest.
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 11:52 am
by John Billings
"decorating a coffee table"
I wanna great big one to use as a coffee table!
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 11:58 am
by Mark Eaton
Now
that would be cool!
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 12:00 pm
by John Billings
Big ole sheet of plate glass sittin' on the tuners
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 12:02 pm
by chris ivey
yes beautiful! but i'm serious.....!!....when going through this effort towards perfection, how can you accept poorly fitting tuners (overhang on 5) and sloppy washer contact on 1 and 10??
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 2:13 pm
by Harley Morris
My Keyless Sho~Bud plays better than any other Sho~Bud I've ever seen, or played..
Harley
Posted: 18 Feb 2008 3:33 pm
by Colby Tipton
Chris,
I could be wrong but I don't think I am in saying this.
I think John is staying with the dimensions of the old Gumbys, I think some of the fit problems are because of the new style Grover tuners on it, the old style tuners are different.
As for the washers they could be different too.
Maybe John will come along soon and answer the answers I just gave.
Colby