Page 2 of 2

Re: 360V64 converting into a 360WB?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2008 1:56 pm
by collin
paologregorio wrote: I've brought my guitar to more than one luthier who's stated without qulification that guitars made today are the best ever; a lot of things that were hit and miss before are known quantities now. Are there cheap guitars and amps out there? Yes, but well built, quality instruments are the best ever.
Yeah, I totally agree there! With stuff like the v64 of the WB, it doesn't really matter because they are both versions of a guitar that didn't really exist in the 60s anyways (well...the v64 is close to some, but it's a stretch). Build-wise, you are totally correct.

I'm no expert, but i've owned enough true vintage gear to know that build techniques were really hit-and-miss back in the day. Of course this differed from manufacturer to manufacturer (Ric being quite consistent of course), but i've had some vintage fenders/mosrite/gibson that were inconsistent in feel, were hardly playable in some cases, and because of the materials (nitro..) show terrible wear after 40 years. In many cases, the issues these guitars had weren't because of the age/wear, it was evident that they weren't well made to begin with.

This is especially true with student model guitars. I was amazed at the quality level of a vintage student model Ric (ES-17), when compared to a vintage Fender equivalent I used to own ('66 Musicmaster II) from the same year, and likely the same price range originally. It seems like student models, to some companies, were throwaway instruments lacking even the basic build quality of higher priced models. Nowadays, beginning guitarists can pick up a relatively inexpensive guitar that plays well and will last.

Sorry for the tangent! :)

Cheers,
-Collin

Re: 360V64 converting into a 360WB?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:35 pm
by teb
But....it was exciting! I remember when the Fuzz-tone came out and later the wah-wah pedal. They were totally revolutionary and you stuck them between the guitar and your amp - what a concept! The rumor would float around town that the lead player for the "XYZ band" got a fuzz tone and you would actually make sure to go to their next gig to check it out and wait all night for them to play "Satisfaction". If you were lucky enough to be able to find and afford a Rickenbacker or a Hofner Beatle bass, you were a star and other musicians would come to your gigs just to see it. It was a very different world back then. Good classic guitar and amp re-issues seem to be pleasant reminders of the best parts of that era and minimize the not-so-pleasant parts - which is probably as it should be. Too bad I wasn't smart enough to buy a stack of plexi TRCs back then and just stick them in a drawer.

Re: 360V64 converting into a 360WB?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:39 pm
by jingle_jangle
collin wrote:
paologregorio wrote:

I'm no expert, but i've owned enough true vintage gear to know that build techniques were really hit-and-miss back in the day. Of course this differed from manufacturer to manufacturer (Ric being quite consistent of course), but i've had some vintage fenders/mosrite/gibson that were inconsistent in feel, were hardly playable in some cases, and because of the materials (nitro..) show terrible wear after 40 years. In many cases, the issues these guitars had weren't because of the age/wear, it was evident that they weren't well made to begin with.

This is especially true with student model guitars. I was amazed at the quality level of a vintage student model Ric (ES-17), when compared to a vintage Fender equivalent I used to own ('66 Musicmaster II) from the same year, and likely the same price range originally. It seems like student models, to some companies, were throwaway instruments lacking even the basic build quality of higher priced models. Nowadays, beginning guitarists can pick up a relatively inexpensive guitar that plays well and will last.
Man oh man, if ever a couple of brief paragraphs merited an entire multipage discussion and its own thread, these do.

I'd like to share my own impressions of the guitars mentioned in this topic (this could be a book-length post, but I'll work on brevity here...), which is a unique mix of long-term observation with only occasional participation--since roughly 1964--and recent very deep immersion in guitars in general and Rickenbackers specifically--since very late 2004, in fact.

My very first recent restoration was my '59 Duo-Sonic, ex Ry Cooder. It had spent two years in a closet in my place in Brasil near the ocean, and had suffered climate-related deterioration as a result... the original nitro was flaking, the die-cast knobs were blistering, chrome corroded, frets green and fretboard gray. It would have been considered a condition 8.5 when it went into the closet. Today I would have cleaned it and kept it patinaed and let the history tell its story. But in 2004 my head was in a different, less-informed place.

But that little Duo-Sonic (and the half dozen similar ones I've owned since) were very well-built little tone gems, once you accept the basic philosophy of mass-produced guitars with interchangeable parts. They were every bit as well built as their contemporary Strats and Teles, with differences being in the wooden bodies and the amount of finish applied. That's it--period.

The primary reason that these guitars show so poorly these days has to do with the fact that they were less-expensive, less-desirable, student guitars that sold for cheaper and cheaper prices to less and less well-off and less-appreciative subsequent owners, until eventually they were trashed. How often do we ever see an early Duo or Musicmaster that hasn't been stripped to natural and had an oil finish applied? Ebay's filled with 'em! And a '66 Musicmaster II is a post-CBS guitar (from the marque's worst, least notable, lowest-quality year imaginable, so it's useless as an example of anything save itself.

An ES-16 or -17 is also a student guitar, made from the same materials and with the same grade of hardware (and great HSC!) as the pro grade guitars RIC made. Difference: set neck, and less finishing time and materials. Same as Fender, as far as the idea of where to cut costs. Amazing value for money, whereas Fenders were merely good value for money.

Inconsistency in playing? Of course--they are natural materials; each with its own personality, despite man's attempts at getting wood to behave , it still will do its "own thing". Difference in "feel" is true of all guitars; perhaps less today than in the past, but still a factor in choosing an instrument.

Consistency in manufacture: Rickenbackers of the '50s, '60s, etc...right up until the mid-1980s when JH made a serious effort (and much success) in bringing manufacturing technology up to snuff, Ricks were much more inconsistently-built than Gibson, Fender, or Gretsch. Gibson and Gretsch, being older companies with decades of experience in producing standard, bent-sided, luthier-constructed acoustic instruments, before the first Frying Pan saw the light of day, already had a good deal of tooling standardization and manufacturing technology in place to move on to the next phase--merely adding electronics and the capacity for amplification as a layer (if you will) on top of a traditionally-built instrument. Later on (post-1960s), both had difficulties with consistency, due precisely to their reliance on traditional construction methods, and the increasing difficulty with finding talented and capable luthiers to work at "reasonable" wages within a factory setting. However, this is a tangential issue.

Back to Rickenbacker: Rick's salvation in the area of construction and technology was the brilliant use of "billet" technology--the machining of a hollow-bodied, relatively thin-topped instrument from a solid block of wood. This could be done by semi-skilled non-luthier types at "reasonable" costs, on cheap tooling, and by virtue of exquisite hand-finishing and well-engineered construction and electronics, yield a beautiful instrument of excellent tone and playability at a salable MSRP. When Gibson and Gretsch were struggling to find a place to put a factory and train or obtain local labor forces, RIC just kept on producing, using the same methods, and updating their tooling until finally all roughing was done using CNC machinery and manufacturing consistency was achieved.

Fender? Well, the idea of manufacturing consistency came about very rapidly, once the goal of mass-production using bolt-together interchangeable parts was focused upon--literally within three or four years.

I've found much more variability in early Ricks (pre-1980s) than I've ever seen in early Fenders (post-1953). In fact, virtually every early Rick I've ever inspected is unique, despite similarities in model numbers and production dates. This is a good deal of their charm and, of course, provides endless fodder for discussions of Rickenbacker history.

Re: 360V64 converting into a 360WB?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2008 5:29 pm
by collin
Paul W- Seriously, you should write a book on this!

I haven't experienced the whole spectrum of vintage guitars, that is for sure. Some that I have played are easily worth the money they command, and can't be compared with anything produced today. Then there are many others with large price tags simply because they are vintage etc, despite the fact that they are falling apart and play horribly. I'm not sure, but I think that was where I was headed in the previous post.

Guitars are past the point of instruments obviously, as collectibilty status takes over, so I can understand the issue of vintage guitar prices. It is interesting to me (as you pointed out) the difference in production techniques that explain why they have changed over the years. (I didn't even think about the post-CBS factor in my '66 MM, that is a very good point).

The main thing is, there seems to be an elitist mentality towards "vintage-only" especially in Gibson/Fender crowds that is pretty funny to me because as Paolo mentioned (and I agree) production is every bit as good now, or better, than it was in the glory days. After doing the math with original price lists, it also seems that obtaining a high-quality guitar is also much cheaper than it was 40 years ago (but that's a whole other issue!).

Cheers,
-Collin

ps...sorry to the thread- went way off here! ;)

Re: 360V64 converting into a 360WB?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2008 7:47 pm
by manta
From Dale: "when the van would break down in southern Illinois and your biggest fear was that the rednecks might kill you because you had one of them "Beatle haircuts"

Sounds like this is the fodder for another thread or a great story.

Timbo