Saturday, January 30, 2010

Guitars With Built In Amplifiers

When the transistor radio was invented, a light bulb went off in the minds of electric guitar and amplifier designers.












This resulted in Fender introducing their first line of transistor amplifiers in 1965. These models were not reliable and did not have the sound their tube counterparts had. Subsequently they had a very short fate and were pulled off of the market.

Of course other manufacturers jumped on the transistor design. It was cheaper and the need for those pesky tubes was eliminated.


For some of these manufacturers another idea occurred. Why not make an electric guitar with a built in battery powered amplifier. Transistors provided a way to house much smaller components in an amplifier chassis.


In 1956 the Eveready Corporation invented the small rectangular nine volt battery, eliminating housing 6 AA or AAA batteries which took up more room and were more expensive.

Some of the first guitars with built in amplifiers came from the Asian nations, specifically Japan and others were manufactured in Europe.

Teisco TGR-1
The Teisco Company of Japan got it’s name from the acronym for the Tokyo Electric Instrument and Sound Company.

Teisco produced their own products under the Del Ray name, which sounded Spanish.


Spain equated with guitars back in the 1940’s and 50’s that were not Hawaiian style guitars.


Teisco produced an odd shaped guitar designated as model TGR-1. The lower section of this guitar housed a low wattage amplifier that could be turned off an on with a slider switch. The amp section ran off of 2 nine volt batteries. The back of the speaker coil was slightly larger than the guitar, so a round metal cover was put on the back of the body. The front of the guitar’s scratchplate was metal and house twin pickups, volume and tone knobs, the slider switch and slats cut out above the speaker section.

There were three European models. Two were manufactured by Davoli. One was under the Wandre name which we have discussed previously with the post about Pioli Wandre.

The first and the oddest is the Davoli Bikini guitar.

During the time of its arrival the bikini was all the rage for beach wear and everyone was talking about the skimpy little outfits that left little to the imagination.

Davoli Bikini Guitar - Built by Wandre Guitars
The Davoli Bikini derived its name from the fact that the amplifier section was not contain within the guitar, but was a separately housed round unit that attached to the guitars lower bout by a couple of metal brackets and a section to house the wiring. Hence it was in two pieces.



The amplifier section was housed in a large round plastic enclosure designed with a plastic grill, similar to the guard plate of an electric fan.

The amplifier was a German made Kraandal CT642.

The guitar section was oddly shaped and covered with a celluloid material, which seemed to be the case with many Italian made guitars. It had twin pickups attached to a chrome plate with pushbutton switches and an on/off slider switch.

Pioli Wandre had hooked up with Davoli and used Davoli pickups in most of his models. He created a guitar with a built in speaker that was named the Meazzi Hollywood. This guitar looked more like what one would image a guitar to resemble. However true to Wandre’s artistic design, it was very misshapen.




This instruments neck was made of wood instead of the aluminum used on most of his guitars and the body was made out of plastic. It had one Davoli pickup with a plastic cover, a volume potentiometer and an on/off throw switch. This guitar also purportedly used the same Kraadal CT642 amplifier.




Hofner, from Germany, had created an amp-in-guitar they named the Bat. I believe it was profiled in Vintage Guitar Magazine last year. It had an odd shape, but at least it was symmetrical.









The upper section of the guitar’s lower bout housed the amplifier. The top of the guitar had a fairly complicated design above the speakers grill. The bottom section housed the same control panel found on their Violin bass and other Hofner instruments.





The back access panel was made from part of the wood that had been carefully sawed off of the guitars back. This gave it a much classier look than just slapping a piece of plastic on the guitars back. The amplifier was designed by Hofner.



We have discussed a little bit about Kay guitars. This company started out in 1890 under the name Groeschl Musical Instrument Company. Henry Kuhrmeyer was an employee that rose through the ranks to become the owner of the company. They were the biggest musical instrument company in the world at one point.

They took their name from Mr. Kuhrmayer's middle initial. Kay produced a guitar called the Kay Busker. Although I cannot seem to find much information about this guitar, I do recall it being shaped somewhat like a Les Paul and contained a speaker in the lower bout.


Kay also produced a Busker that had a Telecaster-like appearance.


For the uninitiated Busking is a word that means playing as a street musician.

More recently there are about four models of guitars with built in amplifiers that can be deemed guitars as opposed to toy guitars.

Fernandez Nomad and Nomad Deluxe
.
The Nomad’s body comes in a number of colors including red, white and blue.

Fernandez Nomad

The body has sort of a crescent shape with a cutaway design. The speaker is on the top bout. The headstock resembles a large banana and the maple neck is full sized. There is one humbucking pickup near the bridge. The bridge is a Fender adjustable style bridge. The controls are a volume knob and a two way throw switch. The amp produces 5 watts.




The Nomad Deluxe has all the same features and shape of the regular Nomad, plus a DigiTech multi-effects processor with drum machine.







The processor gives you 25 programmable effects (10 at once), 40 factory presets and 40user created presets, including amp, cab, pickup, and mic models.



This guitar comes with an input for an expression pedal input and contains a built chromatic tuner. Besides the built-in speaker this guitar has a headphone output jack.










The Synsonics Terminator features a built-in amp and speaker. I am not certain if this guitar/amp is still available. It wasn’t quite as well constructed as some of the previously mentioned models.






It came with a single coil pickup Asian made pickup and a tremolo bar. Some models had two single coil pickups.

These guitars were manufactured in Korea during 1989 through 1990.

A similar guitar may be sold today under the trade name First Act.

Finally Pignose Industries, the maker of those little battery powered amplifiers, has been offering a guitar with built-in speaker for sale since the late 1990’s.

The model PGG 100 houses a built in amplifier that produces 1 watt and runs on a nine volt battery.

The speaker is housed under the strings in the same place the soundhole would be on an acoustic guitar.




The guitar has a unique double cutaway design with a small body. The neck has a 24 ¼” length and a 3+3 headstock. The bridge is an adjustable Fender style unit.

Pignose recently introduced an upgraded model. The model PGG 100 Deluxe which has the same features, plus gold tone hardware, Binding on the neck body and headstock, plus block inlays on the fretboard. Both guitars have a single Pignose stacked humbucker and a volume potentiometer with the famous pignose knob.

 


10 comments:

reitze said...

I've built 3 amp-in-guitars from Dean V & ML acoustics with Roland Micro Cube amps (speaker and circuits). They PROVE this concept is important and not just for street music. The modern amp is enough to create real "tone" which usually requires a very strong amp to produce. But with amp-in-guitar its possible without waking the house. It IS my opinion that these ARE the best guitars ever yet built! Here is a video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mP_wUfvKL3M. From there you can find videos of the other models as well as links to other forum discussions (where my assertions are discussed at length).
Elliott Dean
www.edans.org

reitze said...

Here's a few more benefits of amp-in-guitar with a slightly more acoustic-portability backbone than most:
1. Electric capabilities w/o wires or radios (full mobility)
2. Live strings = Real tone without high power (while others sleep)
3. Enhanced acoustic capabilities (louder, warmer, sweeter)
4. LNA pre-amp. Buffers signals at guitar for noise-free line-out.
5. Effects walk the house even if radio'ing into a nice amp
6. Power in right spot (near your mouth like you talk to people or cam with it)
7. Versitility (1 guitar can handle more settings like street, stage, home, beach, church, party, ...)

Anonymous said...

"Some of the first guitars with built in amplifiers came from the Middle East, specifically Japan"

OK, come on. The Middle East is Iran, Iraq, Palestine, Israel...Japan is not even close. Japan is FAR East.

Anonymous said...

i found this kay busker guitar on ebay... it seems to have a mic input jack socket so i presume the speaker is used for that ..nice interesting guitar ,,
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Vintage-Kay-Busker-LP-Guitar-Built-Speaker-/170565721555?pt=UK_Musical_Instruments_Guitars_CV&hash=item27b6825dd3

Unknown said...

Fiound this one. Looks great
http://godisgoed.be/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=91&Itemid=106

Anonymous said...

Hi, I have a Kay Busker up for adoption. Will consider any offer, the amplifiier part needs looking at and the fretboard is intact but needs to be reglued to the neck. In the right hands this could be a great project resulting in a unique and playable instrument.

Unknown said...

I have a terminator guitar. I've been doing a little work on it and I'm having a hard time finding the actual wiring diagram for it. A few wires are loose and I want to make sure I'm soldering them in the correct place. Do you or anyone else know where to find the diagram?

Unknown said...

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Munter said...

I have acquired one of these guitars and it has brought me here. Thank you for putting this together.

I'm looking for some more information on the one I have. It is labelled Maestro. No other markings. Circuit board is dated to 2006. After cleaning and setup, as a guitar it's not too bad at all. Nut was a bit high, that was it. Has a fender tremolo and HSS pickups with separate volume for the humbucker and the two single pickups.

Old Ebay image of a similar guitar here:

https://i.ebayimg.com/00/s/MTAyNFg0ODA=/z/s28AAOSw8KRcsfb~/$_86.JPG

Thanks

Joe Katzenberger said...

Wow, this is great! What wonderful history. I have a new patent for the "Folded Horn Acoustic Guitar" Patent # 10,777,172. Go to Google Patents and check it out. I put two five foot long folded horns in an acoustic guitar, powered by an internal condenser mic (watch feedback), an internal amp and two small internal speakers that feed the horns. Like Klipsch horns inside the guitar, or a Bose Wave Guide. I just cut a partial prototype of the horn from solid laminated, dried and squared up maple. I did this on a CNC machine, 1.3 million lines of code just to cut the prototype. 16 hours non-stop and complete. Did not know what to expect, but the wood is very stable, and the sound is great with preliminary testing. I need to attache videos and photos. Thanks! Joe K