Danelectro DC59s and the like
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- Fran
- The Curmudgeon
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- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 5:53 am
- Location: Nottingham, Englandshire.
Aye, I'll try to call in over the weekendDoog wrote:Ooooh, can you please try it out for me, Franno?Fran wrote:They have those in my local shop, look decent but I haven't played one.
Be my haaaaaaaaaaaaands
Curious to know what the single-coily sounds are like.

He stocks Alden as well and I was very impressed with them. Still tempted on the fully hollow archtop he has in.
Doog wrote: Me too! I'm having heaps of fun just seeking out new brands and models, I'll probably just pack-in playing and just do this from now on

paul_ wrote:When are homeland security gonna get on this "2-piece King Size Snickers" horseshit that showed up a couple years ago? I've started dropping one of them on the floor of my car every time.
I did because it looked like cardboard. LOL Not my cup of tea I guess?timhulio wrote:Did HNB just complain the pickguard is made of formica? That's kinda the point - it's not like other guitars in construction. If you approach them only having played conventional solidbodies then of course they're gonna feel different.
- Fran
- The Curmudgeon
- Posts: 22219
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 5:53 am
- Location: Nottingham, Englandshire.
Dooooooooooooog....Doog wrote:Ooooh, can you please try it out for me, Franno?Fran wrote:They have those in my local shop, look decent but I haven't played one.
Be my haaaaaaaaaaaaands
Curious to know what the single-coily sounds are like.
First impression, it's super heavy, like Acrylic Guitar kind of weight.
Looks well made, nice finish, the bigsby works fine but felt a bit loose/cheap, the machine heads are The locking type Grover copies.
It played like the usual out-of-the-box import guitar, not bad but not exactly inspiring either. Judging by the build quality it will be a different beast with a good set up.
The pups are quite meaty, more like P90's to my ears and there are some interesting 'hollow' sounds with the phase switching. Quite versatile in many ways, I can see why it would be useful in a recording situation.
The guy in the shop said he could match hotrox prices and he said the brand are releasing more interesting stuff soon. They are made by the Burns people at the same factory apparently.
Some pics...
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- Fakir Mustache
- .
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- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 5:23 pm
No, that model (or the original model it's based on) has a wider body, I remember seeing that in a book that lists the widths.
In fact you should be able to find that info on the net in particular if you track down old catalogs. Gibson didn't keep body widths secret as they do now.
Actually here, 14" wide:
http://www.vintageguitarandbass.com/gibson/catalogues/1970_Les_Paul_5.php
Also check this thread, someone wrote that the original Recordings (different model) were originally 13.5 wide:
http://www.lespaulforum.com/forum/showthread.php?187868-Anyone-here-purchase-the-new-Les-Paul-Recording-II
Possibly those Revelations are not 14" though, I don't know.
In fact you should be able to find that info on the net in particular if you track down old catalogs. Gibson didn't keep body widths secret as they do now.
Actually here, 14" wide:
http://www.vintageguitarandbass.com/gibson/catalogues/1970_Les_Paul_5.php
Also check this thread, someone wrote that the original Recordings (different model) were originally 13.5 wide:
http://www.lespaulforum.com/forum/showthread.php?187868-Anyone-here-purchase-the-new-Les-Paul-Recording-II
Possibly those Revelations are not 14" though, I don't know.
Not quite. The pickups are designed and made by Alan Entwistle, who also makes the Burns pickups (from conversations with him I suspect he's a bit more involved in Burns now, possibly making design suggestions and the like). The actual Revelation guitars are made in the same factory as Alden/Hutchins models as far as I know.Fran wrote:They are made by the Burns people at the same factory apparently.
Some pics...
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Brandon W wrote:you elites.
Also, those pickups really are meant to be pretty good copies of the original Gibson low impedance ones, they're not just generic Chinese pickups in a fancy shell.
I've had the bigsby model on my list for a while but I hadn't realised the hard tail was so cheap... I wish the mahogany colour came with the bigsby though.
I'm probably going to be getting either this, the solidbody Gretsch electromatic or the three-pickup electromatic hollowbody in the next month or so.
I've had the bigsby model on my list for a while but I hadn't realised the hard tail was so cheap... I wish the mahogany colour came with the bigsby though.
I'm probably going to be getting either this, the solidbody Gretsch electromatic or the three-pickup electromatic hollowbody in the next month or so.

Brandon W wrote:you elites.
- Fran
- The Curmudgeon
- Posts: 22219
- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 5:53 am
- Location: Nottingham, Englandshire.
I thought they had connections with Alden, all the evidence is there when you pick both brands up, but he said Burns. Dunno Eric.ekwatts wrote:Not quite. The pickups are designed and made by Alan Entwistle, who also makes the Burns pickups (from conversations with him I suspect he's a bit more involved in Burns now, possibly making design suggestions and the like). The actual Revelation guitars are made in the same factory as Alden/Hutchins models as far as I know.Fran wrote:They are made by the Burns people at the same factory apparently.
Some pics...
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Alden actually feel better though imo. The full hollow body I tried with the Toaster pups was one of those guitars I wanted to instantly buy there and then.
Entwistle Pups seem to be a selling point as there are tags on these stating what they are. I was quite impressed with the Entwistle models in the Tanglewood Les Pauls a few years back, they dont look anything special and have daft names but always seem to have a great tonal range.
Or gimme 3 thou bucks, innit: http://www.imperialvintageguitars.com/i ... uitar.html