joel fildes I’ve got a mate from Essex who is so rough around the edges, he will only say “no” with “shove it up your arse.” If he answers “no,” it’s actually cause for concern. Diamond of a bloke, though.
I guarantee you, if I had a blood pressure monitor on while watching your videos, it'd drop right down. The calming effect of these videos makes them almost medicinal.
That's old school vinyl tubing around the wires. Used A LOT on older pre-transistor radios. Love watching these, as I work on old radios and tv as a hobby. This is like seeing another side of a coin
Tesco Del Ray... 1967 3 pickups, neck like a piano leg, power blue, feedback and hum in all modes and volumes... Cost me 39.95 at Thrifty Drug Store. That was a LOT of mowed lawns. I wish I had it to play around with today.
Years ago I sold my harmony hollow body bass. I am 69 years old and still kicking myself over that, not for the ridiculous price they bring, but because it was so much fun to play. You did great work on this guitar.
Greetings from Scotland. I've watched all your videos and I'm in awe of your skills sir! My mate is one of Scotland's top luthiers, I've said to him that he should film one of his builds but he said he couldn't because he swears too much hahaha! He has now been tagged "The Tourette's Luthier". Keep the videos coming sir, they're magic!
You should try to convince him more. I’d love to see a Scottish luthier on the CZcams scene, especially since I can’t find any in moray and if I need a luthier at some point I could always hit him up.
Another nice video as usual. I would certainly test those resistors. They are for summing the signals so the vol pots work more independently. It was common back then before they realised you could wire the pots backwards. The early Fender jazz basses had similar resistors. They will dull the tone and reduce the output significantly. And after 65 years, the old carbon composite resistors will break down and often have more resistance than originally. In valve amps they are particularly problematic. The other thing that may be causing the weak output from the neck pickup is the magnet. There's every chance it could simply need recharging with a couple of neos. Cheers!
Hi Rob nice to see you here as I'm a fan of your channel as well. I was wondering what you meant by "wire the pots backwards" if you can elaborate thanks
I never understood the principle behind the Zen sound of one hand clapping until I started watching these amazing uploads - the combination of calm voice, gentle handling of old instruments and almost infinite skill has an incredibly calming effect. This 'Strat is clearly a chepo by today's standards (although all those pots etc. were far better than I was expecting), but the love shown by both owner and Ted is all that matters in the time and care spent making the repair. Mesmeric . . . not to mention educational.
"It's like poking the Rottweiler...I don't really want that hassle." - TedSpeak perfection, that. My favorite luthier, and Guitar Repairman/Surgical Genius, does it again. This ol' Strat-O-Tone comes back to life, and blasts off for regions unknown...but just, "put it over to the bridge...leave it like that, forever...this is where the magic is." And we all "believe in magic", right?
You're funny ! You make videos like this and you wonder why people are going to send you their guitars... no matter the cost ! You have the love in your work and it is easy to see !!! Just awesome content !
Just a note you might be interested in: I had a similar 4 knob, black, Silvertone brand Stratotone from about the same era and it had a white plastic end pin. As a result, I wasn’t surprised that you found a wider hole than you expected and the hidden remains of a white plastic end pin, since I suspect the metal end pin was a retrofit. My Dad bought me that guitar in the 1963-1964 time frame.
That’s exactly what’s going on. I have a Stratotone with a broken white plastic end pin. I have a replacement, but plan to just screw in a modern one for now. When it breaks, I will then install the broken end pin with the old stock replacement. Plastic for a strap pin wasn’t a brilliant idea.
I've got a 65 Silvertone Bobkat (solid-body, made by Harmony), and it had a white plastic strap button on the bottom and a chrome-plated one up by the neck. I thought maybe the upper button had been replaced. I've since replaced both of them. I've always loved that guitar.
My second guitar was a Harmony Stratotone Jupiter H49 with a Bigsby and I still dream about it 50 years after I sold it. I was told they were produced in Chicago by Harmony as student guitars and the pickups were gold foil Dimarzio’s unlike the ones in this video. I loved the tone and playability of it.
I still have a 63 Harmony Rocket with a singe gold foil Dimarzio. I bought is in 1989 at a pawn shop for $100. Been with me ever since and I love that guitar.
I was one of those kids who watched the Beatles on Ed Sullivan, but I ended up playing drums. My first kit was a 1960 5 piece Ludwig with Zildjian cymbals. I learned guitar starting in 1971 with and ended up a '57 Telecaster that an ex friend smashed into 1000 pieces while he was tripping.
just stumbled on your channel, and im glad i did. ive probably watched 10+ videos the past 2 days. you do great work and have a good attention to detail. more people should learn from your ways. keep up the good work
When I watch your videos, I feel entertained and enlightened. You explain both your actions, and the rationale behind them, beautifully. It doesn't hurt that your vocal tone is relaxing. Keep up the great work supporting music and musicians!
This is my favorite guitar ever. Bought a 1959 one in 2017 and gigged with it since then, threw away all my other guitars. Lightweight, comfortable and those DeArmond p.u. are brutal.
On using compressed air: „I‘d not be able to see it, but I‘d know it‘s there.“ This sentence perfectly explains the difference between ok-ish worksmanship and yours. I find it is also taking care of small details like these that sets good apart from excellent. Greetings from one of your viewers in Europe :)
I really like looking at these old Harmonies, they're a little piece of lesser-known guitar history that has been mostly eclipsed by Fender and Gibson. It's really quite interesting to see what the competition was doing at the time.
Thank you for all your great vids. It is very interesting, instructing. Philosophically, it is great to see someone who’s business is to fix and add value to old or broken instruments.
I have the single pickup version of this guitar, bought in a junk furniture store for $65 in the 90s. I souped it up with new pickups and tuners and cut a new pick guard. I was surprised to find that they're now selling for as much as $1500 in the original condition! I did have fun working on it though, so... Thanks for the video. It was nice seeing an old Harmony. I wish instructional videos like this had been available back in the day.
Mr. T...so love your video's...I started playing in 1965....learning and loving it more than ever...I started working on guitars about 15 years ago....first thing I seem to do with a 'new' old clunker is just taking it apart....get it naked and see where we are going together...You have a voice for radio...I could listen to you...late night coming across the airwaves....thanks so much...billy b. from Western North Carolina.
Valens, Wolf, Woodford... Came for the hot lick, stayed for the repair hops... magic fingers thru-out Still waiting for the music vid to drop. You selling... Ima buyin
That was exactly what I was thinking it was either the resistor or the tone pot capacitor. The other thing you could do is probably try to reverse the polarity on the pickup... but I would certainly try what you're talkin about first. It sounds good enough that I think I have to disagree if it was my guitar I would definitely spend all day trying to figure it out🤣🤣🤣
That piece of white plastic where the strap button was is actually a remnant of the original strap button. The Harmony H-22 basses were the same way. The button by the bridge was white plastic, and the one on the upper bout by the neck was black. I've never seen another set of strap buttons like them. Unique to Harmony! I am not sure how they were held in, but it wasn't with a screw.
The tubing of various sizes used for insulation in the old days was generically known as "spaghetti". I'm not sure of the material used for that thicker piece, possibly a vinyl, but it was originally crystal clear. That stuff has a habit of breaking down and can become exceedingly sticky and gummy, though I've rarely if ever seen it break. A final decay stage is to dry up and crystallize, and it will crumble into dust. That doesn't happen too often, but it does. Spaghetti also came in black and other colors. Spaghetti was also was made as a woven cloth tube impregnated with some form of plastic. I've never seen that stuff break down, but it usually becomes rock hard with age. There was no such thing as "shrink tube" in those days, but the woven stuff could be compressed lengthwise to expand it slightly and then pulled back to the original shape, so you could use a "too small" piece and press it over a resistor body or the like, and then it would hug the contents when it returned to its normal length. The vinyl stuff also stretched a little, so could be pulled over the end of a connector or the like. We are talking about maybe 10% expansion here, not the 100% or more we are used to with shrink tube. When you mentioned tacking the wire to the pot lead to hold it in place, I was reminded that the "proper" way to solder wires, taught back in the day, was that you made a good mechanical joint first, and then you soldered. The mechanical joint, in this case wrapping the end of the wire through the terminal lug and then pinching it with pliers, was intended to provide all of the mechanical vibration and pull resistance, and also make good electrical contact. The solder was just there to hold things in place and keep the contact points from oxidizing.
The fabric style of "spaghetti" tubing is sometimes known as "Cambric" tubing. The older style, seen used as insulation on vintage transformers and amplifiers, seems to be a woven phenolic materia, and is often varnish-coated and gets brittle with age; the newer style is more like woven fiberglass, extremely resistant to heat, and sometimes with a rubbery silicone outer coating. Very usefull stuff!
@The Shape Well, clearly for you it was a waste. For someone that might have to work on this stuff, or who might actually care about how this stuff was built originally, maybe it wasn't a complete waste.
Another great video. You do excellent repair work, give thoughtful explanations of what you're doing and why, are forthright but, most of all, really enjoy your sense of humor. Wish you were my neighbor.
Brings back memories. My first electric guitar was a Harmony by Heath double cutaway hollow body kit guitar. I couldn't afford a cool Gibson double cutaway and my dad was a big Heathkit radio builder so he got me the Harmony. After moving to acoustic it sat in the closet for years until I finally sold it to a guy in NYC, who loved it. I think it cost $250 in the late 60s and I sold it for three ties that much, though I've been told I could have gotten more.
Some of these harmony guitars had tapered plastic strap pins, glued or held by friction. I've got a 59 Stratotone Jupiter H49 with DeArmond gold foil pups. Very sweet. Not sure what those resistors were doing on the pup switch, but changing the value might help that low output bridge pup. Love your videos you might have some of the sharpest chisels on the planet!!
That guitar sounds awesome.. the bridge pup kicks ass... it indeed is where the magic lives.. vintage blues and rockabilly tone in spades.. that would make a killer slide fiddle as well... you do awesome work!
Kudos on another solid repair! I love old funky guitars like this. I have an old Silvertone Bobkat (you can see it on my channel) and this guitar's vibe really reminds me of it. Those old single coils can be really cool and a very unique sound.
I've installed two-way mandolin t-rods in 2 H-49 Jupiters. Both had broken rods so I removed the fret boards and lengthened the channels to accommodate the new rods. They came out great.
FYI, those are DeArmond pickups. DeArmond built the pickguard assemblies in-house and shipped them to Harmony. Anything made by DeArmond in the '50s and '60s was of the best quality.
Yay, another great vid... and what a nifty guitar. It's great to see how cool the guitar looks in the end complete with fantastic fingerings but still miss seeing your "Blues Face" whilst you was 'a plunkin'.
Nice to see people other than me using a good ol' Harbor Freight straps to work on a guitar body :) Also, you've inspired me to work on my single pickup basket case version of this, and also a black double pickup version. Sigh, time to start saving those nickels and dimes for parts. LOTS of nickels and dimes lol
About 20 years ago I had a chance to buy a pre-62. It sounded amazing, was in pretty shape.....and was dirt cheap I wanna say around $300. This was back when vintage market really hadn't paid any attention to most guitars NOT built by Gibson or Fender (except for the 70's era...those things were going for less than a brand new Mexican Fender). Couple weeks later, i changed my mind...remembering early Stones albums had Brian Jones playing one of these....and of course it was gone. I'm still kicking myself for not buying that one...& a boat load of $400 70's 3-bolt Strats. Enjoyed the video!
Another job well done. I had a small Japanese guitar given to me when I was a kid from a friend of the family. It was a solid body, with an aluminum pick guard. I don't recall it having a name on it other than made in Japan. He also gave me an original Ace Tone fuzz master. Iv'e had it for 50 years and never had it working. I tried fixing it by using a schematic from the internet, but discovered the transistors listed said they were npn, instead of pnp. It was wrong so I used pnp's and it works.
I love stuff like this. Whenever I find a funky Harmony or Silvertone at a junk shop I have to buy it on the off-chance I can make it into a one-off treasure
The white plastic inside where the strap button goes is possibly what's left of the original broken off plastic strap button. I have an old Harmony with a white plastic strap button.
Mr. T, thanks so much man. You did my baby proud and it was great watching you work on it. I got you a endoscope so don't buy one.
Sounds like the kind of friends to have, both ways.
A mate of mine once tried to get me an endoscope...I told him he could stick it up his arse!’ (Old British humour)...
joel fildes I’ve got a mate from Essex who is so rough around the edges, he will only say “no” with “shove it up your arse.” If he answers “no,” it’s actually cause for concern. Diamond of a bloke, though.
@@thearabianmage I guess he would use a colonoscope instead.
@@joelfildes5544
🤣 🤣 🤣 😆 😆👏 👏 🤣 🤣
I guarantee you, if I had a blood pressure monitor on while watching your videos,
it'd drop right down.
The calming effect of these videos makes them almost medicinal.
He does have a sorta Bob Ross effect, yeah.
I appreciate the care you show for these older 'cheap' guitars that have sentimental value. It's nice.
That´s how he got good
Professionalism
„its a kind of strad and from the 60s“
literally all attic violins ever
That's old school vinyl tubing around the wires. Used A LOT on older pre-transistor radios. Love watching these, as I work on old radios and tv as a hobby. This is like seeing another side of a coin
Rumor has it, Hendrix himself made that crack and broke the string.
tsss everybody knews that Hendrix burnt his guitars and continued playing music by doing air guitar.
Tesco Del Ray... 1967 3 pickups, neck like a piano leg, power blue, feedback and hum in all modes and volumes... Cost me 39.95 at Thrifty Drug Store. That was a LOT of mowed lawns. I wish I had it to play around with today.
Thanks for the tip where you bent the "ear" on the Switchcraft jack. 👍 First time I've seen it..
I love watching you fix up these older lesser known guitars.
Years ago I sold my harmony hollow body bass. I am 69 years old and still kicking myself over that, not for the ridiculous price they bring, but because it was so much fun to play. You did great work on this guitar.
I loving the old harmony content. 👍
Greetings from Scotland. I've watched all your videos and I'm in awe of your skills sir! My mate is one of Scotland's top luthiers, I've said to him that he should film one of his builds but he said he couldn't because he swears too much hahaha! He has now been tagged "The Tourette's Luthier". Keep the videos coming sir, they're magic!
You should try to convince him more. I’d love to see a Scottish luthier on the CZcams scene, especially since I can’t find any in moray and if I need a luthier at some point I could always hit him up.
Another nice video as usual. I would certainly test those resistors. They are for summing the signals so the vol pots work more independently. It was common back then before they realised you could wire the pots backwards. The early Fender jazz basses had similar resistors. They will dull the tone and reduce the output significantly. And after 65 years, the old carbon composite resistors will break down and often have more resistance than originally. In valve amps they are particularly problematic. The other thing that may be causing the weak output from the neck pickup is the magnet. There's every chance it could simply need recharging with a couple of neos. Cheers!
Hi Rob nice to see you here as I'm a fan of your channel as well. I was wondering what you meant by "wire the pots backwards" if you can elaborate thanks
I never understood the principle behind the Zen sound of one hand clapping until I started watching these amazing uploads - the combination of calm voice, gentle handling of old instruments and almost infinite skill has an incredibly calming effect. This 'Strat is clearly a chepo by today's standards (although all those pots etc. were far better than I was expecting), but the love shown by both owner and Ted is all that matters in the time and care spent making the repair.
Mesmeric . . . not to mention educational.
"It's like poking the Rottweiler...I don't really want that hassle." - TedSpeak perfection, that. My favorite luthier, and Guitar Repairman/Surgical Genius, does it again. This ol' Strat-O-Tone comes back to life, and blasts off for regions unknown...but just, "put it over to the bridge...leave it like that, forever...this is where the magic is." And we all "believe in magic", right?
Saw the thumbnail of this video and thought, "What kind of taco is that?!?"
"this has been in a closet for decades"
same
Come on out then! :D
nahh too many homophobes and I don't have anyone to relate with :
@@elahfuncion7102 Oof :(
Well, you're welcome in my family. Nothing living in my house is straight :D
ʚ♡⃛ɞ(ू•ᴗ•ू❁) thanks you made my day
@@promethbastard and that’s what i call a home of sexual
You're funny !
You make videos like this and you wonder why people are going to send you their guitars... no matter the cost ! You have the love in your work and it is easy to see !!!
Just awesome content !
Howling Wolf was 1.98m tall and weighed over 300 pounds.
Just a note you might be interested in: I had a similar 4 knob, black, Silvertone brand Stratotone from about the same era and it had a white plastic end pin. As a result, I wasn’t surprised that you found a wider hole than you expected and the hidden remains of a white plastic end pin, since I suspect the metal end pin was a retrofit. My Dad bought me that guitar in the 1963-1964 time frame.
That’s exactly what’s going on. I have a Stratotone with a broken white plastic end pin. I have a replacement, but plan to just screw in a modern one for now. When it breaks, I will then install the broken end pin with the old stock replacement. Plastic for a strap pin wasn’t a brilliant idea.
I've got a 65 Silvertone Bobkat (solid-body, made by Harmony), and it had a white plastic strap button on the bottom and a chrome-plated one up by the neck. I thought maybe the upper button had been replaced. I've since replaced both of them. I've always loved that guitar.
*grins widely* and remembers Christmas morning 1964..... (sigh)
Love your videos! Great repair tips, great humor and lovely calm demeanor. Thanks, man!
In the UK in the mid 60's, guitarist Spencer Davis of the 'Spencer Davis Group' played a Stratotone Jupiter.
I can't be alone in wanting to see the end result of the actual glue up job Twoferd..
You are a wizard. Always a joy to see your work.
My second guitar was a Harmony Stratotone Jupiter H49 with a Bigsby and I still dream about it 50 years after I sold it.
I was told they were produced in Chicago by Harmony as student guitars and the pickups were gold foil Dimarzio’s unlike the ones in this video. I loved the tone and playability of it.
I still have a 63 Harmony Rocket with a singe gold foil Dimarzio. I bought is in 1989 at a pawn shop for $100. Been with me ever since and I love that guitar.
Gidday, mate love your problem-solving ability it's such a pleasure to watch and learn, thank you.
I was one of those kids who watched the Beatles on Ed Sullivan, but I ended up playing drums. My first kit was a 1960 5 piece Ludwig with Zildjian cymbals. I learned guitar starting in 1971 with and ended up a '57 Telecaster that an ex friend smashed into 1000 pieces while he was tripping.
I really enjoyed watching this video. Well done on the repair and the sound is just amazing.
just stumbled on your channel, and im glad i did. ive probably watched 10+ videos the past 2 days. you do great work and have a good attention to detail. more people should learn from your ways. keep up the good work
That sound brings back memories of 1963 YMCA middle school dances!
When I watch your videos, I feel entertained and enlightened. You explain both your actions, and the rationale behind them, beautifully. It doesn't hurt that your vocal tone is relaxing. Keep up the great work supporting music and musicians!
This is my favorite guitar ever. Bought a 1959 one in 2017 and gigged with it since then, threw away all my other guitars. Lightweight, comfortable and those DeArmond p.u. are brutal.
I love how he says “a super young howlin Wolf, around 1952 or something” he would have been 42 lol. Born in 1910!
On using compressed air:
„I‘d not be able to see it, but I‘d know it‘s there.“
This sentence perfectly explains the difference between ok-ish worksmanship and yours.
I find it is also taking care of small details like these that sets good apart from excellent.
Greetings from one of your viewers in Europe :)
I really like looking at these old Harmonies, they're a little piece of lesser-known guitar history that has been mostly eclipsed by Fender and Gibson. It's really quite interesting to see what the competition was doing at the time.
I have a Harmony Airline accoustic I bought just because I wanted an older vintage guitar for cheap its nice.
Thank you for all your great vids. It is very interesting, instructing. Philosophically, it is great to see someone who’s business is to fix and add value to old or broken instruments.
I have the single pickup version of this guitar, bought in a junk furniture store for $65 in the 90s. I souped it up with new pickups and tuners and cut a new pick guard. I was surprised to find that they're now selling for as much as $1500 in the original condition! I did have fun working on it though, so... Thanks for the video. It was nice seeing an old Harmony. I wish instructional videos like this had been available back in the day.
Surprised, and sad?
Love those old growlers! It’s all rock n’ roll! Love your videos. Thanks for sharing!
Mr. T...so love your video's...I started playing in 1965....learning and loving it more than ever...I started working on guitars about 15 years ago....first thing I seem to do with a 'new' old clunker is just taking it apart....get it naked and see where we are going together...You have a voice for radio...I could listen to you...late night coming across the airwaves....thanks so much...billy b. from Western North Carolina.
your videos are so great i really enjoy watching them!
Valens, Wolf, Woodford...
Came for the hot lick, stayed for the repair hops... magic fingers thru-out
Still waiting for the music vid to drop. You selling... Ima buyin
Seen David Hidalgo from Los Lobos playing one with Tom Waits
Came for the Stratotone stayed for the soulder.
Thank you. Fun and educational. You sure do a great job!
TW! Loving your jam! I also love the shop.
I love these old catalog electrics. I have an old Teisco tulip bass I refretted and use as a backup to my mustang in an indie rock band.
Those old carbon comp resistors on the switch might've drifted higher on the one that goes to the neck pickup.
That was exactly what I was thinking it was either the resistor or the tone pot capacitor. The other thing you could do is probably try to reverse the polarity on the pickup... but I would certainly try what you're talkin about first. It sounds good enough that I think I have to disagree if it was my guitar I would definitely spend all day trying to figure it out🤣🤣🤣
I've seen Several of your vids= I wish I had a luthier with half your skills near me, in Leesburg, FL. Well done, Sir!
My favorite type of burst 😍 love those colors!
Another brilliant vid. Thank you. So interesting. 👍🏻
That piece of white plastic where the strap button was is actually a remnant of the original strap button. The Harmony H-22 basses were the same way. The button by the bridge was white plastic, and the one on the upper bout by the neck was black. I've never seen another set of strap buttons like them. Unique to Harmony! I am not sure how they were held in, but it wasn't with a screw.
Thank you for this repair journey, I picked up a couple of great tips I plan to use now that I know. Ya know.
Yes! Luthier must get a minute or two of fun after repairs complete 🥳
GREAT job, love these on harmony guitars. I learned a lot, thanks
The tubing of various sizes used for insulation in the old days was generically known as "spaghetti". I'm not sure of the material used for that thicker piece, possibly a vinyl, but it was originally crystal clear. That stuff has a habit of breaking down and can become exceedingly sticky and gummy, though I've rarely if ever seen it break. A final decay stage is to dry up and crystallize, and it will crumble into dust. That doesn't happen too often, but it does.
Spaghetti also came in black and other colors. Spaghetti was also was made as a woven cloth tube impregnated with some form of plastic. I've never seen that stuff break down, but it usually becomes rock hard with age.
There was no such thing as "shrink tube" in those days, but the woven stuff could be compressed lengthwise to expand it slightly and then pulled back to the original shape, so you could use a "too small" piece and press it over a resistor body or the like, and then it would hug the contents when it returned to its normal length. The vinyl stuff also stretched a little, so could be pulled over the end of a connector or the like. We are talking about maybe 10% expansion here, not the 100% or more we are used to with shrink tube.
When you mentioned tacking the wire to the pot lead to hold it in place, I was reminded that the "proper" way to solder wires, taught back in the day, was that you made a good mechanical joint first, and then you soldered. The mechanical joint, in this case wrapping the end of the wire through the terminal lug and then pinching it with pliers, was intended to provide all of the mechanical vibration and pull resistance, and also make good electrical contact. The solder was just there to hold things in place and keep the contact points from oxidizing.
l wilton Just the way my Dad taught me (GPO-trained in the UK)...
The fabric style of "spaghetti" tubing is sometimes known as "Cambric" tubing. The older style, seen used as insulation on vintage transformers and amplifiers, seems to be a woven phenolic materia, and is often varnish-coated and gets brittle with age; the newer style is more like woven fiberglass, extremely resistant to heat, and sometimes with a rubbery silicone outer coating. Very usefull stuff!
@The Shape Well, clearly for you it was a waste. For someone that might have to work on this stuff, or who might actually care about how this stuff was built originally, maybe it wasn't a complete waste.
Another great video. You do excellent repair work, give thoughtful explanations of what you're doing and why, are forthright but, most of all, really enjoy your sense of humor. Wish you were my neighbor.
Clayton Sample from Edmonton's Rockin' Highliners played one of these in the late 90's, early thousands........
Will miracles never cease! Awesome ! I remember those guitars! Awesome tune by the way! Keep making the magic happen and bringing new life to old!
Thank you Ted , awesome as usual ! 👍👍👍💖
Nice old guitar. Well worth the effort.👍
Nice repair and an awesome way to clamp the body! It sounds cool, too!👍😎🎸🎶
mystery white plastic at strap button is most likely old strap button as that's what Harmony's used
Brings back memories. My first electric guitar was a Harmony by Heath double cutaway hollow body kit guitar. I couldn't afford a cool Gibson double cutaway and my dad was a big Heathkit radio builder so he got me the Harmony. After moving to acoustic it sat in the closet for years until I finally sold it to a guy in NYC, who loved it. I think it cost $250 in the late 60s and I sold it for three ties that much, though I've been told I could have gotten more.
Nicely done... do enjoy watching your work!!
Excellent job! That dirt on the fretboards was older than you! 🤣🤣🤣 keep the videos coming I enjoy them very much.
Nice "caul" on the correct adhesive (see what I did there?). Excellent & comprehensive repair, as usual.
Dude, I really dig the sound of that thing and your play. Good stuff!
Some of these harmony guitars had tapered plastic strap pins, glued or held by friction. I've got a 59 Stratotone Jupiter H49 with DeArmond gold foil pups. Very sweet. Not sure what those resistors were doing on the pup switch, but changing the value might help that low output bridge pup. Love your videos you might have some of the sharpest chisels on the planet!!
I can’t believe the bent ruler trick! I’ve always bent coat hangers into shape then measured those.
that's a rockin' little Harmony guitar. Thanks for the great tips too.
Wow, that guitar is as old as I am, and is arguably in better shape. She sounds good, has that 60's tone you'd expect. Another fine job.
Nice work . I like your Jam at the end of the video!!!
Some nice rock n roll to carry us out. Nice vid dude.
Another amazing job! Thanks.
That guitar sounds awesome.. the bridge pup kicks ass... it indeed is where the magic lives.. vintage blues and rockabilly tone in spades.. that would make a killer slide fiddle as well... you do awesome work!
I just got a 1960’s H44 (I do believe) which is a one pickup version. They sound pretty sweet but appear to be pretty delicate.
Wow..sounds great! Thank you...
Enjoyed watching your talent at work. 👍🏼
"influence it a bit more.." classic. Great vid again... Thanks.
Kudos on another solid repair! I love old funky guitars like this. I have an old Silvertone Bobkat (you can see it on my channel) and this guitar's vibe really reminds me of it. Those old single coils can be really cool and a very unique sound.
Sounds like a dream come true
I've installed two-way mandolin t-rods in 2 H-49 Jupiters. Both had broken rods so I removed the fret boards and lengthened the channels to accommodate the new rods. They came out great.
They say the value is in the story.
Great job Ted. Take care
FYI, those are DeArmond pickups. DeArmond built the pickguard assemblies in-house and shipped them to Harmony. Anything made by DeArmond in the '50s and '60s was of the best quality.
Yay, another great vid... and what a nifty guitar. It's great to see how cool the guitar looks in the end complete with fantastic fingerings but still miss seeing your "Blues Face" whilst you was 'a plunkin'.
Great pivot on the repair method. Strap and flexible plastic was a smart move!
Nice to see people other than me using a good ol' Harbor Freight straps to work on a guitar body :) Also, you've inspired me to work on my single pickup basket case version of this, and also a black double pickup version. Sigh, time to start saving those nickels and dimes for parts. LOTS of nickels and dimes lol
About 20 years ago I had a chance to buy a pre-62. It sounded amazing, was in pretty shape.....and was dirt cheap I wanna say around $300. This was back when vintage market really hadn't paid any attention to most guitars NOT built by Gibson or Fender (except for the 70's era...those things were going for less than a brand new Mexican Fender). Couple weeks later, i changed my mind...remembering early Stones albums had Brian Jones playing one of these....and of course it was gone. I'm still kicking myself for not buying that one...& a boat load of $400 70's 3-bolt Strats.
Enjoyed the video!
Another job well done. I had a small Japanese guitar given to me when I was a kid from a friend of the family. It was a solid body, with an aluminum pick guard. I don't recall it having a name on it other than made in Japan. He also gave me an original Ace Tone fuzz master. Iv'e had it for 50 years and never had it working. I tried fixing it by using a schematic from the internet, but discovered the transistors listed said they were npn, instead of pnp. It was wrong so I used pnp's and it works.
Single coil pickups can often be re-magnetized, if that is the problem with the neck pickup. Neat little guitar. Thanks
I love stuff like this. Whenever I find a funky Harmony or Silvertone at a junk shop I have to buy it on the off-chance I can make it into a one-off treasure
Such nice rocking at the end!
Great jamming at the end!
Nothing better than a cup of coffee and a new twoodfrd video!!
Well done...it is a beauty.
Nice work, Ted! As Always!
Got that cool lo-fi vibe going on. I like it!
The white plastic inside where the strap button goes is possibly what's left of the original broken off plastic strap button. I have an old Harmony with a white plastic strap button.
f 'n wonderful....
Picked up one of these for 35 bucks at an antique mall in perfect condition with the case. The only problem is the pickups are incredibly noisy.