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Originally Posted by John A.
Rub the piece hard with your thumb, until you can start to feel it getting hot from friction - then immediately smell it. If it's phenolic, you'll smell the phenol right away. This also works for Bakelite, Catalin, etc.
So if Tusq is a pressure & heat molded phenolic plastic, it's closer to Catalin than to Delrin. In its time, Catalin wasn't a very stable material, but that probably had more to do with the state of manufacturing at the time.
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01-30-2024 04:17 PM
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Some of the old Kays have the "Stylist" neck that also shows up in Nationals and a few other brands (supposedly even a few Gibsons). I've had a couple. It's a really interesting idea and the neck is stable, but it's clunky as hell.
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Originally Posted by unknownguitarplayer
So I can only assume the core is aluminum? Can't quite read what it's covered with.. are the fretboard & back made of wood?
What about it do you find clunky? It looks very trim compared to the conventional necks.
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The core is magnesium. The necks are odd. Narrow, but deep, like a baseball bat. None of the ones I’ve seen were bound, and the strings tended to roll off the fretboard. On the plus side, they were all acoustically loud as hell.
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Originally Posted by unknownguitarplayer
The necks are odd. Narrow, but deep, like a baseball bat. None of the ones I’ve seen were bound, and the strings tended to roll off the fretboard.
On the plus side, they were all acoustically loud as hell.
One of my favorite old-school players is a National / Dobro guy.. Tut Taylor. He recorded with Norman Blake - I have a record they made, "Friar Tut", which is really kind of amazing. Not my wheelhouse, really, but I know good playing when I hear it.
Another in that category is Miss. Fred McDowell, "I don't play no rock & roll". He's a slide blues player, astounding imho.
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Originally Posted by WimWalther
Henriksen Bud or Blu 6
Today, 07:53 PM in For Sale