Shoutbox

dp: dude
368 days ago

Bango_Rilla: Shout Bananas!!
324 days ago

BillyBlastOff: See you kiddies at the Convention!
308 days ago

GDW: showman
259 days ago

Emilien03: https://losg...
181 days ago

Pyronauts: Happy Tanks-Kicking!!!
174 days ago

glennmagi: CLAM SHACK guitar
160 days ago

Hothorseraddish: surf music is amazing
139 days ago

dp: get reverberated!
90 days ago

Clint: “A Day at the Beach” podcast #237 is TWO HOURS of NEW surf music releases. https://link...
23 days ago

Please login or register to shout.

IRC Status
  • racc

Join them in the #ShallowEnd!

Need help getting started?

Current Polls

No polls at this time. Check out our past polls.

Current Contests

No contests at this time. Check out our past contests.

Donations

Help us meet our monthly goal:

87%

87%

Donate Now

Cake May Birthdays Cake
SG101 Banner

SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Help with Danelectro Guitars...

New Topic
Goto Page: Previous 1 2 3 Next

The Hodad is probably a pound or two heavier than the U2 and is more "solid" feeling I guess. That's one of the reasons it doesn't feel quite like a Dano to me. I sold mine because I found that the pickup combinations that I liked didn't sound any different than my U2, and I'm not a huge fan of Bigsby type trems.

Shawn Martin
http://www.drummerman.net
http://www.youtube.com/GKacedrummerman
http://www.facebook.com/drumuitar

Ok, then U2 Dano for me it is. I had no idea they were considered hollowbody guitars. Must sound pretty thin with the lipstick pickups but that's part of the surf sound I guess.

i don't know about the recent reissues, but i have three masonite models from the '60s and i would definitely not consider them hollowbodies. i think semi-hollow would be a more apt description. they have quite a lot of wood inside and more heft than a hollowbody would.

i recently picked up a dano reissue baritone neck and i'm waiting to pounce on the cheapest u2 burst i can find on ebay - i've seen a few go for under $200 lately. anyone have one with a damaged neck?

tommyalvarado is right about the typical Danelectro construction -- poplar frame, etc. As they have no f-hole and don't depend on any kind of open sound box, though, it might be better to consider these guitars as semihollowbodies. There are plywood blocks inside to support the pickups, bridge, and so forth, so it's not all open resonating space in there.

What hollowness they have is just a function of economy; it's cheaper to use masonite than a chunk of mahogany.image

But no doubt the sonic qualities of all that empty space contributes to the special Dano sound that people talk about.

Sorry about the url thing. There was supposed to be a totally brilliant pic of the inside of a Dano. No time to try again before work. Confused

Yes, semi-hollow is the correct term. I edited my original post. Oops. I guess I was trying to think and type too fast...

Here are my Danos, a copperburst U2 and a blackburst Guitarlin.

image

image

Shawn Martin
http://www.drummerman.net
http://www.youtube.com/GKacedrummerman
http://www.facebook.com/drumuitar

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 22:36:16

Since this is also becoming a "show your Dano thread", here's an old picture of me---the proud owner of a new Jerry Jones Longhorn bass in "appliance burst". (One of my abstract painting works-in-progress behind me.)

image

Zak, I saw the Flat Duo Jets--the second time was in a club and it was just drums and the Sears Silvertone exactly like your second link. They kicked ass, and I will never forget that show. I couldn't believe what they did with a minimal set up.

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 22:36:24

Back in 1990 I saw them in Sacramento when they opened for The Cramps. The bass player played an electric (P bass, I'm pretty sure).

One thing I'll always remember is he spoke the only words in their whole set. They came on stage and he said, "we're the Flat Duo Jets from Chapel Hill...let's rock." And so they did!!

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 22:36:27

I wanted a DC59, but they didn't offer them left-handed here ( Japan only, and MIC at that). I opted for a NOS lefty U2 neck and made my own body. The back and sides were made from a 2-piece alder blank and fully routed inside like a real Dano. It's topped with mahogany. Low output Korean pickups, left bass pickguard and a NOS lefty pot assembly from a U-2. Not sure how it compares to a real Dano, but acoustically, it's very loud and sounds great with both pickups on. I play it at home through an old Guild Thunder 1 amp ( lots of headroom) and a Digiverb ( for now) and it sounds nice and surfy.

image

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 22:40:06

zak

Brendan
The back and sides were made from a 2-piece alder blank and fully routed inside like a real Dano.

Real Danelectros weren't made that way, the bodies were two pieces of masonite on a frame assembled out of pine blocks which were stapled (yes stapled) together. Different models had varying amounts of lumber inside them. They all had a block that the bridge screwed into, but some had other reinforcing pieces in strategic positions. A 1448 or 1457 is mostly hollow, but my early "Peanut Body" (slightly smaller than U2 size one-cutaway) had a full center block.

I'm aware of that. I had a vintage body to use as a guide. I meant that it is fully hollow inside except for the bridge block.

Last edited: Mar 27, 2009 08:02:32

zak

websurfer
Zak, I saw the Flat Duo Jets--the second time was in a club and it was just drums and the Sears Silvertone exactly like your second link.

So the first time you saw 'em with the upright bass player? 20 years ago or one of the mid 90s shows they did with a bass player?

One of my favorite bands. The self-titled LP (with the almost inaudible bass player) and "Introducing..." are incredible records.

Indeed! I would add Go Go Harlem Baby and In Stereo to that list, I literally wore out vinyl and cassette versions of all 4 of those in the early 90's. When the White Stripes were hot a few years back I tried to turn people on to The Flat Duo Jets to hear guitar and drums done right. Wink
I stopped following them around the time White Trees came out, I ought to dig that out and give it another listen...I remember _really _not liking that one back in the day.

So,

What is the verdict on putting a tremelo...Bigsby or other on a U2 or U3 Danelectro.

I really love the sound of these guitars, and it's a perfect tone for my band, but I NEED a tremelo bar.

If anyone has a definitive answer, please email me at tikiyaki@gmail.com.

I have a few I'm looking at.

tikiyaki
So,

What is the verdict on putting a tremelo...Bigsby or other on a U2 or U3 Danelectro.

You could put a Bigsby on a U2. But there are some things you will have to do first. The B-5 will not quite fit with the knobs and whatnot. So some minor surgery will have to happen there or with the Bigsby itself. Also, a new bridge is obviously going to have be put on. Something fairly short as well. Floating? A cut-down TOM? Good luck with that.

The most important thing is that you will have to open up the back and glue some wood in there under where the B-5 (or B-50) would sit. It should span the open area completely, i.e., it should contact the structural sides of the guitar body. If you have ever looked inside a reissue U2, then you know that this is going to present a woodworking challenge; it looks less like a guitar in there and more like a fancy cardboard box you might pack wine glasses into.

I had always figured I would Bigsbify a Guitarlin as there is plenty of room for the B-5 assembly. And it would look the most hillbilly, thereby increasing the cool factor as on the Duct Tape scale. Then they stopped making them and I lost interest due to the immediate bizarre price hike.

Tikiyaki...a little edit here. Have you thought about the new Coral reissues? They might have all of what you seek.

image

SSIV

Sure like the looks of those things. Are they out yet?

Also, I came across this photo of Pete Townshend with a Dano .. odd to see that.
image

(defunct) Thee Jaguar Sharks

Plus! Other stuff not surf: https://soundcloud.com/jamesmileshq
Enjoy every minute

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 27, 2009 19:55:01

I use a Danelectro 'Innuendo' model as my backup guitar when i break a string. The intonation is not 100 % but it's 'close enough for surf' and the tremelo bar is great! the tone is definitely 'surf-y'.I bought it about 10? years ago and it was the best 170. bucks i ever spent! (or was it 270, god i don't even remember!..,. astonishing quality-to-price ratio,nevertheless.) The Innuendo model has the option of 4 lil' pushbutton effects if you put a 9-volt battery in the back. You have the option of a lame chorus, tremelo, or slight slapback delay. The GOOD effect is a really cool sounding fuzz, but the volume is ridiculously way louder than the regular guitar volume. SO, i never bother to use the effects. You have to remember to plug in the correct one of two input jacks provided, if you plug into the jack connected to the effects and you have no battery in there ,you will get no signal ,and instantly look like a dork tryna figger out what the hell is happening with your stage setup.
But i definitely recommend the Innuendo, i think that the Hodad is essentially the same basic guitar idea without the pushbutton sound options.
Because i use strings on the heavier side(.011,.014,.018,.30,.49,.52) i put an extra spring in back in the tremelo.

Goto Page: Previous 1 2 3 Next
Top