Time capsule 1969 Teisco Del Rei guitar-scale bass

Started by ilan, April 24, 2022, 09:05:31 AM

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ilan


Alanko

How do you keep a bass that clean? Even stored in a case surely the chrome would pit or something?

I imagine waking up on Christmas morning, circa 1969, and seeing that under the tree would have been pretty special.

Basvarken

www.brooksbassguitars.com
www.thegibsonbassbook.com

morrow

Some of the early Teisco things were primitive , looks to be the case here . Over $900 Cdn , I think they were about $30/40 back in the day .

morrow


Basvarken

Quote from: morrow on April 24, 2022, 12:47:57 PM
Some of the early Teisco things were primitive , looks to be the case here .

So is a P-bass.
Has never been a problem for 7ender ;-)
www.brooksbassguitars.com
www.thegibsonbassbook.com

ilan

The bridge is a piece of art. You can adjust height, you can adjust string spacing, why bother with intonation.



Dave W

It may have been made in Teisco's factory, but if it's not branded Teisco or Teisco del Rey, then it's not a Teisco. I can't find any reference to an EB-10 in any Teisco catalog or sales sheet.

Those photos are enhanced. Here's another one that's more realistic looking. https://reverb.com/item/25412522-60-s-teisco-eb-10-short-scale-bass-guitar Notice his detailed description calls this Teisco-made. It's not a Teisco brand. Also note that it was listed at at $225. At least that was realistic.




Pilgrim

If it were Teisco it would have one of the brand logos on the headstock, considering what good condition it's in.  No argument with "made by" Teisco.  That fits, although the bridge is extremely advanced for them.
"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila."

Alanko

Quote from: morrow on April 24, 2022, 12:47:57 PMI think they were about $30/40 back in the day .


You could buy a decent house for that back in the day. I remember when this was all fields round here lad!!

Dave W

Quote from: Alanko on April 26, 2022, 03:16:44 PM

You could buy a decent house for that back in the day. I remember when this was all fields round here lad!!


Alanko

Quote from: Dave W on April 27, 2022, 01:11:28 AM


My neighbour on one side is a retired farmer from Yorkshire. This sketch is very well observed!

uwe

I know that bridge from a similar bass. Together with the guitar scale, it makes the "bass" unplayable above the 5th fret, it then sounds grotesquely out of tune.

Even lovers of more arcane bridge models here such as the tiptastic two-point - why give away names? - would balk at this one.

If Ilan had an animal asylum, I guess all inhabitants would look something like this:

We've taken too much for granted ... and all the time it had grown ...
From techno seeds we first planted ... evolved a mind of its own ...

ilan

#13
In fact the family cat is one-eyed and mentally disturbed.

As for the bridge - I'd just unbolt it from the body and use it as a floating bridge, slant it as needed. Actually as I'm typing this I'm holding a Hofner 182 with its metal bar floating bridge and the intonation is near perfect up to the last fret.

morrow

Bridge adjustments are highly over rated . I'm a fan of the wooden popsicle stick bridge on Danos . There is a sweet spot for it , even with a two octave neck . It's not exactly rocket science to find the spot . The Danos completely changed my views on just what it was that made an instrument good .
They sound better than the adjustable metal ones . More woody thump , less sustain . Sustain is over rated too .

(I will admit the modern bridges are much easier to set )