
'67 365 cavity shot
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- Greenstone
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'67 365 cavity shot
"Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, intelligent direction, and skillful execution. It represents the wise choice of many alternatives." W. A. Foster
- fabandgear
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Re: '67 365 cavity shot
Here's the interior of my March '65 365. Note the "Mike DiFiore was here 1969". DiFiore's Music in Cleveland, Ohio was a Rickenbacker dealer back then.
"When I kill, its on direct orders from Her Majesty's government." -007
Re: '67 365 cavity shot
I've been there many times back in the '70s during DiFiore's heyday. EVERYBODY went there, it was music gear Mecca; walls of Marshalls and Acoustic amps!fabandgear wrote:DiFiore's Music in Cleveland, Ohio was a Rickenbacker dealer back then.

- Greenstone
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Re: '67 365 cavity shot
What does the 365-'R' and 365-'T' mean on these respective guitars?
"Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, intelligent direction, and skillful execution. It represents the wise choice of many alternatives." W. A. Foster
Re: '67 365 cavity shot
It's my understanding that RIC made instruments in batches of 25 and, starting sometime in the mid-1960s, designated each instrument in a batch by an alpha number, A through Y. I have found examples in a few of my vintage Ricks.Greenstone wrote:What does the 365-'R' and 365-'T' mean on these respective guitars?
- Greenstone
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Re: '67 365 cavity shot
Thanks, very cool
"Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, intelligent direction, and skillful execution. It represents the wise choice of many alternatives." W. A. Foster
Re: '67 365 cavity shot
I received some clarification from John Hall on my theory as to the alpha letters. I was close, but no cigar.
You're on the right track. Each SPRAY SESSION had an alpha code. This was used to determine when an instrument had dried enough to move on to fine sanding and buffing.
It's not absolute though, as different supervisors had their own systems of coding and keeping track of things.
Thanks, John!
You're on the right track. Each SPRAY SESSION had an alpha code. This was used to determine when an instrument had dried enough to move on to fine sanding and buffing.
It's not absolute though, as different supervisors had their own systems of coding and keeping track of things.
Thanks, John!