Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Harmony 2813 restoration Pt.2






After finding the market value on this instrument to be far less than its worth to me, I abandoned the plans to restore the guitar to its original condition. As it was, I'd only gotten as far as sanding the body and rebuilding it (with the necessary electronics repairs) to test the guitar's sound.
I discovered it sounded a bit muddy, (though it had respectable tone) and lacked good output power. But after completing the modifications to the Pro-Custom guitar, I now had a good-quality extra pickup lying around. What do I do with it? Put it in the Harmony...what else? I also stacked a magnet from the pickup I'd removed from the Harmony onto the magnet of its remaining pickup to increase the pickup's sensitivity. As well, I ensured that the hight of both pickups brought them closer to the strings; these modifications effectively solved the problem of the guitar's output power.
One unusual electronic feature is the pickup selector switch I added. It's wired to keep the pickups in series wiring (as opposed to the traditional parallel wiring) when both pickups are selected.

The paint scheme was an adaptation of a large canvas painting I did last year. If you look closely, you'll see the Big Dipper in the stars, and there's a little river flowing from between the mountains (just below the output jack on the pickguard).
In paying respect to the original guitar, I've kept the original inspection stickers that were still intact on the neck plate.

So, there it is...It sounds just sweet. The modified original pickup (the black one) kicks out strong with a meaty punch and boom that reminds me of the higher notes on my Precision Bass. The Cort pickup just sings; it carries exceptionally smooth trebles and mids with just enough bass push, and a sweet sustain. Combined, they kick out a very versatile sound without too much bite or sting. Although it can be used for shredding, it would make a nifty jazz or blues guitar. In a word,'fun!' -and it looks great, too.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Cort 'Pro-Custom' mods...



Mod Specs: 'Pro-Custom by Cort' Strat-Type
Original single-coil at the bridge has been replaced by
an Ibanez INF4 humbucker. Also added for the INF4 
is a coil-tap switch (small toggle next to the pickup 
selector). All other electronics are original.

This guitar was originally purchased in 2008 for about $100. I had bought it solely for its one piece solid maple neck to be used in another experimental guitar concept (now cancelled). However, I made the 'mistake' of plugging it in when I got it home. The sound smacked me back to my senses; only then did I notice it had amazing action, and a floating tremolo with solid metal saddles. It's been in regular use since then, and the new addition has only made it better. 
Its original smooth tone can still be pulled from the mid and neck pickups, but now can switch into scream mode in an instant. It's still being fine-tuned, but in spite of it's higher output the INF4 compliments the original sound better than I expected. Thanks to Ace Yates for the gift certificate to Manchester Music Mill (http://manchestermusicmill.com), which is where I got the used INF4. 

Monday, September 27, 2010

Harmony 2813 restoration Pt.1






I was randomly given this Harmony 2813 guitar by a friend yesterday. Supposedly, it was intended to be smashed at the end of a concert as part of the show finale. It never was, and has been sitting around his house for a while.
The body was sanded at some point in it's history, but only on the front and back; leaving some left overs of the original white finish on the sides. From a glance, it appears to have the finish on the sides intact; however, what is left of this has been haphazardly plastered in some places with either white paint, or possibly white-out. It has some minor dings in it, but nothing major. The only contour in the body (on the top, near where your arm would rest) is unclear as to whether it was originally there, or was added when the body was sanded.
The neck and headstock were in great shape, just needed a little polishing. Again, just a few dings here, not perfect, but great for what I initially suspected.
Having the original wiring intact, so far the only major issue with the electronics has been the tone knob. It's likely completely busted; having a scratchy sound/ feel when turned, and the guitar will not generate sound (when plugged in) at all unless the tone pot is in a certain position. It will likely be replaced. One of the unusual things about this particular series was that they had no switches, just both pickups wired in series.
After being sanded down to the wood, the plan is to replicate the original white finish.
The only other major modification I'm thinking of at this point is to replace the original bridge with a Gibson-style tune-o-matic type.
The tone it exhibited before disassembly was a bit muddy, but workable. This should clear up after the new tone pot and some new strings are installed.

A bit of trivia; you my recognize this guitar. The album cover of Switchfoot's "Beautiful Letdown" record featured a guitar of this same type, with the only noticeable difference being that theirs had a maple fretboard.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Introducing the versatile SDG-TC1





Latest from SDG Guitars' workshop: SDG-TC1
TC1: Tone Carver 1
Specs:
Bridge Pickup: Dimarzio X2-N
Neck Pickup: Fender Lace Sensor Silver
Controls: Volume, Pickup Blend (center knob), Variable coil tap (small blue knob -for X2-N)
Maple Neck w/ 21 fret Rosewood fret board
Ping Tuning Machines
Worn Silver Finish

Having two pickups with sounds that are worlds apart turns out to work brilliantly. The Lace Sensor sings with bright sparkle that also carries enough boom and punch to resemble a P-90. The X2-N is very hot and 'raunchy' -ready to shred or scream. But utilizing the blend knob is where the magic begins. This guitar's tone is extremely versatile; simply by varying the amount of each pickup, or fiddling with that coil-tap knob, you get all sorts of crazy cool tonal variations. And with the right overdrive (say, like the 'Warp' channel on my Hughes & Kettner Matrix 100, a Danelectro Fab-Tone, or a Big-Muff Pi) the volume knob is a very effective gain control -right on the guitar!

Want your very own TC-1? Email me: limartstudios@gmail.com for more info.

Thanks to Joe at the Manchester Music Mill for the Memphis scrap guitar,
and the great deals on the pickups. (http://manchestermusicmill.com)