Author |
Topic: 7 String Epiphone Electar Lap Steel, Circa 1941, $650 |
Mark Leue
From: Massachusetts, USA
|
Posted 11 Sep 2014 3:16 pm
|
|
Excellent plus condition, big fat pickup with smooth fat sound. Seven string lends itself to 6 or 9 tuning for jazzy sound. Great little steel. All original including felt backing. No case. The knobs appear to be non original.
|
|
|
|
Rick Stratton
From: Tujunga, California, USA
|
Posted 12 Sep 2014 10:49 am
|
|
Those knobs look to be original to me.
I have a 1940 6-string version. Same knobs.
Great sounding and playing instruments! _________________ Jackson Pro-IV D-10, Fender Dual-Pro 8, Epiphone Zephyr-6 |
|
|
|
David Mason
From: Cambridge, MD, USA
|
Posted 12 Sep 2014 12:38 pm
|
|
Whoa... I have a 1941 six-string, serial #5563 with the exact same knobs! Though mine is the cheaper monochromatic one, and lacks the instructions for "soft", "medium", "loud"; "mellow", "normal" and "brilliant"... you get what you pay for, I guess.
I had thought MINE were replacements, and the originals were the eight-sided ones sometimes called... hatbox? Or pillbox, maybe? They must've phased them out in 1940, or it was a war thing or something. Oh goody! We can't all be unoriginal in the exact same way, unless we're writing love songs I spoze. So what rhymes with "knobs".... |
|
|
|
Mark Leue
From: Massachusetts, USA
|
Posted 12 Sep 2014 6:24 pm Knobs
|
|
Great information there! I was going by the factory photos but if we both have the same "wrong" knobs, they're probably original! Thanks. Mark |
|
|
|
Gary S. Lynch
From: Maryland, USA
|
|
|
|
David Mason
From: Cambridge, MD, USA
|
|
|
|
Rick Stratton
From: Tujunga, California, USA
|
Posted 13 Sep 2014 12:58 pm
|
|
I'm sorry, I messed-up.
I thought you were talking about the tuner knobs.
The volume and tone knobs on yours are definitely not stock! _________________ Jackson Pro-IV D-10, Fender Dual-Pro 8, Epiphone Zephyr-6 |
|
|
|
David Mason
From: Cambridge, MD, USA
|
Posted 14 Sep 2014 5:52 am
|
|
How do two 1941 Epiphones from opposite areas of the country end up with the exact same "wrong" knobs? (I actually think mine spent most of it's life in Canada.) Calculating the odds of that knob switch is beyond my little scope, at least. |
|
|
|