Tricone... Yikes!

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

Moderator: Brad Bechtel

Post Reply
User avatar
Kekoa Blanchet
Posts: 212
Joined: 25 Jul 2008 3:55 pm
Location: Kaua'i

Tricone... Yikes!

Post by Kekoa Blanchet »

If you missed your chance to buy that Frypan for $45,000 back in June...

http://www.ebay.com/itm/guitar-vintage- ... 4d11938cbd
Scott Thomas
Posts: 1003
Joined: 10 Jul 2000 12:01 am

Outrageous starting bid....but...

Post by Scott Thomas »

I have never seen a National with that kind of pattern. It is quite likely a custom job. Style 3 lily of the valley engraving with the addition of those flowers. Fascinating specimen!

The price is funny given the 1988 estimate of $3,500 by Don Young...even with inflation/crazy market.
Tom Snook
Posts: 645
Joined: 8 May 2002 12:01 am
Location: Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA

Post by Tom Snook »

Don't forget,he's throwing in the book. :eek:
I wanna go back to my little grass shack........
User avatar
Andy Volk
Posts: 10251
Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
Location: Boston, MA
Contact:

Post by Andy Volk »

Tri-yi-yi-cone!
Steel Guitar Books! Website: www.volkmediabooks.com
Michael Kienhofer
Posts: 143
Joined: 15 Oct 2006 12:01 am
Location: Goulais River,Ontario,Canada

Post by Michael Kienhofer »

User avatar
Alan Brookes
Posts: 13218
Joined: 29 Mar 2006 1:01 am
Location: Brummy living in Southern California

Post by Alan Brookes »

It comes with free shipping. The way shipping costs have been rising lately someone had better grab it while they can. :eek:
Ben Elder
Posts: 2378
Joined: 4 Mar 2004 1:01 am
Location: La Crescenta, California, USA

Post by Ben Elder »

His rationale for dating it to 1927 is more delusional than the price.

I'm not at home with my library as I fire off this riposte in militant high dudgeon. The A series may be 1936 (and there may have been more than one A-series) but I'm thinking 1930. (See the Lightning Bolt Style N "Great Acoustic" I wrote for ACOUSTIC GUITAR a few years ago. If memory serves, it also had an A-two digit serial number.) My guess is that the A in this case probably had to do with something like a limited series, special order, etc.

Look at the cover plate. Up until the early thirties, Styles 3 and 4 had flow-through engraving--i.e., the pattern continued from the body through the coverplate. This coverplate is engraved--but separately from the rest of the top...and in a different style? Is this a marriage of a Style 3 body and Style 4 coverplate? The coverplate looks to me like an unto-itself, non-catalog pattern. In any case, the earliest engraved tricones are in the Style 2 pattern. Somebody who does have access to Bob Brozman's book, look at the serial number list in the back and see if he documented it (or another close A-##) serial number.

Another big problem: pearloid headstock veneers as seen here on Styles 3 and 4 came in later (maybe by 1930?). Any 1927 (...28...29) Style 3 or 4 will almost certainly have a plain headstock with an inlaid pearl NATIONAL shield.

Another another big problem: a 1927 (and on into 1928) National would have used "stud" tailpieces--with string slots and posts so that either loop- or ball-end strings could have used. It's estimated that something like the first 500 Nationals had the stud tailpieces.

Not looking good for 1927, as far as I can tell. Looks like a custom-decorated regular production guitar (Brozman documented many such as this) from well after the company had become a going concern.

More nails in the coffin: Nationals, including the pre-production ones hand-assembled by John and Rudy Dopyera, were serial-numbered starting at 100 (not 101, according to Brozman.) The first dozens of these show evolving feaures--wooden soundwells, flat backs and, most damningly to the 1927 theory propounded by lightheadedgod76 on eBay--hand-soldered grille lattice strips. The $45000 wonder has regular-production stamped diamond grilles. Earliest prototypes also had seven diamond holes surrounding the coverplate. I'll bet the ebay tricone has a rounded back and metal soundwell to go with those stamped cutouts.

Anybody want to buy my 1944 Fender Telecaster? Transition logo, Phillips screws, maple-cap neck, s/n 2XXXXX. Just a hundred grand.
"Gopher, Everett?"
Scott Thomas
Posts: 1003
Joined: 10 Jul 2000 12:01 am

Post by Scott Thomas »

Well, I know there are National experts (and I'm not one of them), but I do have the Brozman book. Bill, Bob's book does list some A prefix serial numbers. A13 would put this one at 1935 if it follows the normal sequence.

So, a couple of possible scenarios:

It is a 1930, which would allow room on the cover plate for the extra engraving. The top body engraving looks like variation "C" (c, 1928-30).

It's a 1935, which would argue strongly for it being a factory custom job, since body engraving "flowed through" to the cover plates by this time.

One last observation...look closely at the T-bar on the hand rest. There are engraved leaves that extend all the way across. I haven't seen that before. It seems tacked on.
Dale R Stiles
Posts: 74
Joined: 20 Sep 2012 9:07 pm
Location: Bradenton, FL
Contact:

Post by Dale R Stiles »

Don't be so critical guys. If you read the auction he explains:

"I will hand deliver this to the new owner, that cost is built in to the sale price."


So the guitar only costs $15,000.00 --- the remaining $35,000.00 is for private jet rental for the hand delivery.

:lol:
1965 Blonde Fender Deluxe 8, Rogue Jersey Lightning, Roland Cube, Polytone Mini/Teeny Brute
Scott Thomas
Posts: 1003
Joined: 10 Jul 2000 12:01 am

Post by Scott Thomas »

You're right, Dale...this deal is looking better all the time!

:\

There is some additional information by Mark Makin on that site Michael linked to above:

http://michaelmesser.proboards.com/thre ... ype-custom

Bottom line, he too believes it's a 1930 style 3 with additional engraving done later, and that this is part of a handful of "A" series instruments separate from the Chicago "A" series with which they were erroneously grouped in the Brozman list of serial numbers (and where I got the date of 1935).
User avatar
Alan Brookes
Posts: 13218
Joined: 29 Mar 2006 1:01 am
Location: Brummy living in Southern California

Post by Alan Brookes »

http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopi ... 05#2135805

Check out the above Tricone. It's a much better deal.
User avatar
chris ivey
Posts: 12703
Joined: 8 Nov 1998 1:01 am
Location: california (deceased)

Post by chris ivey »

i didn't realize that john dopera's wife was involved in the development of instruments. i'd only heard of his brother rudy.
User avatar
Allen Hutchison
Posts: 543
Joined: 24 Jun 2012 9:36 pm
Location: Kilcoy, Qld, Australia

Post by Allen Hutchison »

Not surprisingly, the item finished without a bid!
Post Reply