What is a Vibrola?

Setup, repair and restoration of Rickenbacker Instruments

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jwr2

What is a Vibrola?

Post by jwr2 »

I may be sorry I asked ... but too late I posted the question ...
joepee
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Post by joepee »

You vibrate it, and it makes the strings rolla cross the roller bridge.

Doc Kauffman's invention. An early whammy bar.
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jingle_jangle
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Post by jingle_jangle »

There continues to be confusion over the usage of the terms "vibrato" and "tremelo". (Italian: "the act of vibrating")

A rapid change in pitch, back and forth, is vibrato. A pulsing of volume is tremelo (Italian: "a trembling").

A vibrato with rollers=Vibrola

I love Magnatone M's.
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Post by bluespckr »

"Pluck your magic twanger, Froggy!" Sorry,but I couldn't resist the old line from the old Buster Brown Show hosted by Andy Divine, back in my baby days. Ironically (or stupidly, or both), I generally refer to any version of a whammy, tremolo, vibrato bar as a "twanger" because, well, that's kinda what it does.
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Post by jingle_jangle »

Twaaaaannngggg!!!!

Hiya kids Hiya
hiya
hiya
hiya etc...
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rictified
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Post by rictified »

The vibrola was a Ric guitar that had a motorized assembly that made a tremelo effect. It was so heavy it needed a stand like a mic stand to play it, was made in the forties and are rare. P 48 Smith book
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Post by paul_yan »

Jeff,
Here's a "VIB-ROLA" on a 325 C58.

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jingle_jangle
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Post by jingle_jangle »

Gives me a lunchtime hankerin' for that 325 all over again...

How could anything so elegant function so strangely?
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Post by dale_fortune »

"Doc" Kaufmann was a personal friend of mine from the mid 60's up until his death in the 90's so what I say here is from "Doc's" own words. He was an inventor of sorts, always trying to improve on his musical instruments and abilities. He invented
and held patents on many things, but the Vibrola was his from the early 30's. It was originally installed on a Bak-o-lite Rick 6 string electric with a sewing machine motor turning a cam like device that attached to the arm of the Vibrola. The sewing machine motor was controlled with a foot pedal that raised and lowered the voltage so as to make it run fast to slow giving a constant vibrato effect. This worked very well as long as it was running, with it off the guitar was terribly out of tune. "Doc" played this with many Big Bands all around So. Calif. It was quite unique and it got him lots of work both on stage and in his shop building and installing these units on local musicians instruments.
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Post by rictified »

Yes,
all of you who have the Smith book it is on P 48, one of these was for sale last week with a frying pan but I think it was in a wooden Spanish guitar not a bakelite. I think you guys are thinking of the Kaufman Vibrato unless he used the same name which is doubtful. Oh I see Paul, he inserted a hyphen in the word to differentiate it from the Vibrola. The correct term for a twang bar as far as I have always known is vibrato which varies the pitch with the bar, tremelo varies the amplitude (volume basically) not the pitch, early Fender amps are the most famous example I can think of.
jwr2

Post by jwr2 »

Thanks guys ... I don't guitar a lot and when I do I prefer a fixed bridge ... but now I know what a vibrola is ...
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Post by rickfan60 »

And here is Froggy.
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jwr2

Post by jwr2 »

Ted ... that is damn strange ...
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Post by roadrunners »

all i can say is......wow.....
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Post by rickfan60 »

He actually belongs to my brother but he sits on a shelf here in my library. It is not very often that someone mentions old Froggy but oddly enough, I was prepared for it.
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