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The Danedetto Project
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Note: Danedetto No. 1 (the one described here) is currently available for sale. Send a message via the Contact link if interested.
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[Sound clips near bottom of page]
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For some strange reason I've always been attracted to guitars, even before I saw the Beatles perform live on the Ed Sullivan show. By the time I was 14 I had been through more than a few and had developed a propensity to pull them apart to move the necks, bodies and electronics around to see what new and interesting combinations I could come up with. Some worked better than others but by the time I hit my twenties I had focused my attention exclusively on developing my drawing skills and, even though a guitar always seemed to follow me around through life, I never really paid much attention to them until recently. To make a very long story short, I became reacquainted with the beautiful tone you can get out of a Danelectro/Silvertone guitar with lipstick tube pickups and embarked on a quest to track one down. I was lucky to grab this Danelectro re-issue 12-6 double-neck on eBay for a reasonable $365. ![]() Certainly a great guitar, there were a few things I figured could use a bit of "improvement" and I found myself falling back into my old pattern of pulling guitars apart and putting them back together in new and interesting configurations. To get rid of the 60-cycle hum, I swapped the bridge pickups* on both necks for a Seymour Duncan RWRP lipsticks so it humbucks when bridge and neck pickups are both engaged. I wired up a stereo TRS output jack so the bridge pickup on the 12 side is always on, allowing me to play both necks simultaneously. The rosewood bridge on the 6 side was replaced with a metal intoneable one that dramatically improves the tone. I fashioned a "seal" shaped pickguard out of plexi to add that vintage vibe and provide better protection for the body. And, which is where this fits into the Danedetto story, I replaced the 6-string neck with a baritone/bass VI neck. The result is a beautiful sounding and playing double neck guitar that is an absolute gas to play. ![]() But this left me with a bit of a problem - now I had a brand new Danelectro 6-string neck with nothing to attach it to! I always liked the funky body shape of the Danelectro Longhorns and snagged this archtop body off eBay before Xmas '05. ![]() Unlike other Danelectro guitar bodies, this one isn't made from plywood and masonite. It's a "real" archtop guitar made with real wood. After some searching I was able to piece together this blurb that provides some illumination on its pedigree:
The book American Guitars mentions Vinnie Bell was responsible for having the Longhorn archtop bodies made for Coral. These pre-finished, handmade arch-topped and arch-backed longhorn guitar or bass guitar bodies feature a vintage sunburst finish on a hollow body constructed with a spruce top and maple back and sides including a superb multi layer binding on both sides (front & back). They are extremely high quality, traditionally manufactured bodies that originate from MCA's divestiture and liquidation of Danelectro's Neptune, NJ facilities during 1969/70. I took the body and neck to local luthier Paul Iverson [Bryan Adams original bass player, luthier to people like U2, David Gilmour, Sarah McLaughlin, etc. and all around nice guy] to get the neck attached a week before xmas. During some email dialog he mentioned he could make a custom bridge, tail piece and fingerrest. All the stuff I found that was pre-fab was either crap, or wouldn't fit the body - a descent tailpiece was particularly problematic. So I told him to go ahead and make the pieces out of ebony. After the holidays [during which his shop burned down] he spent a couple of weeks trying to track down some ebony. With ebony in hand the project got bumped again because he had a panic job doing working on a couple of guitars for U2 who are just starting their new tour. The nerve - LOL. First step was to get rid of the cheesy Danelectro silkscreen logo on the headstock and we decided to go with an ebony laminate. ![]() Paul had some Larrivee machines left over from a previous job [silky smooth with great gear ratio] that he graciously donated to the project. [Yeah, he was getting intrigued by what I was on about.] ![]() Next came attaching the neck to the body. When he first tried the center-block inside the body had become so weak the body started to break at the seams. After the panic settled, we decided to flood the inside joints with glue. Many of the 50s and 60's archtops suffer from necks and other bits coming off due to the quality of the glue [and possibly craftsmanship] used at the time and, after all, this is a Dano. As luck would have it, the glue trick worked [imagine trying to glue all around the inside of an archtop through f-holes] and we're back on track. As you can see he had to route quite a serious angle in the heel to get the neck to sit right. ![]() Because there were some holes left over from a previous neck attachment we had to cover over, he made an oversize plate out of brass. ![]() With the neck attached, he sculpted a Benedetto style tailpiece and floating bridge out of ebony and attached the tailpiece with a small hinge unit. You can't see it here, but he also installed a piece of metal under the string holes of the tailpiece and ran a wire to the hinge so the strings ground properly. ![]() Next came the electronics. Tone wise I was looking for something that would give me a nice acoustic sound but also a jazz-box vibe so I chose to go with piezo's and a Kent Armstrong floating humbucker. You can't see it in the pictures, but I installed 4 piezo transducer mic's [package of 10 for $4 at my local electronics shop] to the underside of the soundboard inside the guitar. Paul mounted the floating humbucker on a Benedetto style ebony fingerrest [that's what the jazz guy's call a pickguard]. The challenge here was to ensure nothing attached to the guitar body keeping the soundboard free to vibrate as much as possible. ![]() Here's a view of the fingerrest where you can see the volume and tone thumbwheel pots that I'll get to in a bit. They mount so they poke out the bottom of the fingerrest just enough so you can turn them but not enough to be noticeable. I went with this configuration so there would be no knobs or switches to get in the way while playing. Notice how he fashioned the fingerrest so it matches the body cut-away at the neck pocket. ![]() Here is the fingerrest removed from the body. We wired it with a connecting harness so the fingerrest can be completely removed from the guitar with 2 screws. I'm making a dummy plug so without the fingerrest it can still be used as a piezo electric sans volume and tone controls. ![]() ![]() To make the fingerrest "float" off the soundboard, Paul fashioned a mounting bracket from brass that attaches to the heel of the neck. ![]() ![]() The fingerrest itself holds the humbucker plus a subassembly I put together for the volume and tone wiring for piezo's and the humbucker. One of the last things to do will be to put some copper foil on the backside of the fingerrest to provide shielding for the electronics. ![]() Paul is very meticulous and made sure the humbucker wing attachment was set into the ebony so it's totally flush mount. ![]() The electronics PCB is attached by 2 screws with stand-offs. ![]() The electronics are pretty straightforward. I found some 500K thumbwheel pots that I used throughout, .022 mf cap for the humbucker tone and a .067 mf for the piezos. Mogami shielded wiring is used throughout. ![]() The electronics feed to a Fishman PowerJack that doubles as an endpin jack. The PowerJack has a JFET preamp built into it and provides a stereo feed through its TRS jack. The piezo's are wired into the preamp then run out to the fingerrest, through the volume and tone pots, then back to the PowerJack and out the TS portion of the jack. The humbucker runs out the RS side and isn't affected by preamp. Notice how the hinge is in direct contact with the endpin jack providing grounding for the strings while the endpin jack holds it firmly in place. We needed somewhere to put the preamp battery, so Paul fashioned a neat little battery holder beside the endpin jack inside the body. ![]() There were some holes left over from where a previous tailpiece was attached and, as you can see, with the hinge and the battery compartment things were getting a bit messy. Paul tidied it all up with a nice ebony dress plate that neatly hides the mess and holds the battery firmly in place while matching the look of the rest of the guitar. ![]() Aside from shielding the back of the fingerrest and finding some black screws, the Danedetto is done! ![]() As far as tone goes, this thing is a monster. I initially tried some jazz flatwounds but didn't like how the low E and A have a dead thud to them, so Paul installed a set of DR Zebra strings that are alternate wound nickel and brass. It is simply the best sounding electric guitar I've ever played or heard. It goes from a deep mellow jazz to a huge, and I mean huge, acoustic tone. Unplugged it's got a really nice and complex tone you expect from an archtop - not hugely loud, but definitely loud enough for what I'm looking for. Paul also did a top-notch fret-dress and setup [same as he does for U2 and Gilmour] and I must say it plays like a dream. Here are some sample clip[s] showing off the tone. More will be added in due course: |
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I made 3 Danedetto's while bodies were still available. No. 1, which is featured here, another 6-string that went to David Koltai (Pigtronix/Supro fame) and a 7-string which is my main player. Here are a few pics of Danedetto No. 2 being made: ![]() ![]() ![]() Luthier Paul Iverson with the No. 1 & 2: ![]() And here is No. 1 with my 7-string: ![]() |
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* Oh, I just about forgot. Remember back at the beginning how I replaced the bridge pickups in the Danelectro double-neck with some Seymour Duncan RWRP? Well that left me with 2 original Danelectro lipstick tube pickups without a home. Fortunately I found this totally trashed 1985-ish Fender Fat Strat at a yard sale for $5. Actually this is the "after" picture - it was so badly trashed I didn't have the heart to take a picture of it. ![]() It still had quality Gotoh machines and tremolo bridge [with separate trem block and steel saddles], but the head of one of the tremolo bolts was broken off. I drilled out the bolt and installed 2 Floyd Rose studs and trem bolts. The original broken nut was replaced with a Graph Tech Tusq. The white paint was pitted and cracked so I stripped it off, sanded it down and applied 8 coats of Tung oil. The original split coil bridge humbucker was all that was left of the electronics, so after lining the electronic cavities with copper foil for shielding I installed a DiMarzio 250K pot for tone, a Fender 250K push-pull for volume, a Fender 5-way switch and the Danelectro lipstick pickups all wired with Mogami shielded cable. With the push-pull in the down position the 5-way is standard Strat, albeit lipstick flavoured. But when you pull the push-pull out the bridge humbucks with the lipsticks making this a Fat Strat that sounds like no other. Update: during the course of swapping things around the above noted Stratocaster ended up with a different body and pickups, which is a different story. I saved the lipsticks which found a home in this lovely Danelectro '63 which is a reissue of the original Silvertone Amp-in-Case that got me hooked in the first place. ![]() |
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And, just for fun, here is a picture of the effects pedals I play through, some in NATO M-80 ammo cans. I had a hand in building them all including the Pigtronix Envelope Phaser [www.Pigtronix.com] which I did the launch branding, industrial design that brought them world-wide attention and accolades.
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