Help me ID this old Rickenbacker (?) amp PLEASE!
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Wow. Well, maybe it's a Rickenbacker chassis mounted into a non-Rick cabinet ... but looking at it from the back with the panel off, the cabinet construction and bracing is the same as some of the other early 50s Rickenbacker amps I've seen. Maybe I'll just accept that it's a freak of nature and move on! Thanks everybody for your help. I'm going to tell everyone it's a '53 Rick Electro and move on with my life!
Mike: Sorry you are stuck with this amplifier until you can ID it with certainty. This is now your quest. I consider that it has a number of features that are consistent with the early Gibson amplifiers. LOL
Life, as with music, often requires one to let go of the melody and listen to the rhythm
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Hey Mike, I've got news for you!
This is a Rickenbacker amplifier after all... I was (once more) looking for data in Rick catalogs, and stumbled on this page. How could we miss it? I just don't know. The casing is different for sure, and the handle was so Gibson-ish it was simply too easy to get confused. The panel, however, tells it all.
So you are indeed the proud owner of a Rickenbacker M-12. Congratulations!
This is a Rickenbacker amplifier after all... I was (once more) looking for data in Rick catalogs, and stumbled on this page. How could we miss it? I just don't know. The casing is different for sure, and the handle was so Gibson-ish it was simply too easy to get confused. The panel, however, tells it all.
So you are indeed the proud owner of a Rickenbacker M-12. Congratulations!
Wow Jean, thanks! That's the panel on mine for sure. I guess somebody must've mounted the chassis in another old cab of some kind. So, this is an M-12 and not an Electro, huh? Somewhere along the line I guess it got switched from a 2x12 Jensen P12R amp to a 1x12. Jeeze, this amp is a Frankenstein Deluxe! Anyhow, thanks Jean for taking the time to illuminate me as to its origins! BTW, my speaker is a 1953 P12R so I assumed the chassis was from the same year. Is the catalog page from 1953 or maybe 1954?!?
Oops! Not so fast. Not all M-12's were 2-12; in fact most were 1-12. All Rickenbacker amplifiers from that era (that I've seen) are called Rickenbacker 'Electro' amplifiers as general trademarks regardless of model #. I'll take another look at your amp and see if I can come up with something definitive.
Show him the shirts, Adrian.
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Re: Help me ID this old Rickenbacker (?) amp PLEASE!
Was cleaning my garage out and lo and behold, I've found an old Rickenbacker amp that is identical to the one pictured here. Wish mine was in as good shape as the one you've pictured. Can no longer read the writing around the dials and the word Rickenbacker is barely visible but it's there enough to see. No schematic inside but that could be because someone somewhere along the line replaced the back panel. Mine has 6K6 power tubes in it and was wondering if I replaced them with 6V6 and the appropriate rectifier if it would pump up the volume. The original speaker was there but fell apart when I removed it from the cabinet. Texas heat and time must have done a job on it. Does anyone know where I might find a schematic for this "Honey Pie"? the only speaker I had to hook up was an older JBL E120 and it sounds great up to about 1/2 volume then the breakup starts. I'm looking for an old replacement speaker now. Would just love to see a manual or brochure on this old thing. My dad had purchased it along with an old frying pan lap steel back in the mid 60's. Not sure if was originally sold paired up with this amp or not. Anybody out there have any additional info?
Cheers!
Cheers!
Re: Help me ID this old Rickenbacker (?) amp PLEASE!
Wondering if anyone from this thread is still around as I too, seemed to have come across a "Honey Pie" amp.