![]() And yes, the body is made of plywood, has pickup routs big enough for 2 Motherbucker sized pickup routs in the neck and middle positions, a non-adjustable bridge that has 3 slots cut for each string, cast-steel tailpiece with little fingers inside that hold the ball ends of the strings (can be quite difficult to restring at times), single ply black or white plastic pickguard, and usually comes in red, black, or white depending upon year. ![]() I think Harmony may still make these as the Harmony 34" Student Electric Guitar.ĪS for the specs, all of these guitars are 25.5" Scale with a maple neck and usually a maple fretboard painted black (the black paint comes off on your fingers as you play), low cheap frets that are more often than not not level, a zero fret, 6 on a plate 6 on a side tuners that have a tendency to either jam or strip easily. They put in Strat style pickups and removed the pickup switches, and changed from Teisco style knobs to Strat Style. The Harmony H-804 is the modern version, Harmony started making those around 1985-1987ish. They started off looking rather Teisco-like, and by the 80's, they started to loose things like the neck binding, I think the earliest had real rosewood fretboards, and just in general the cheesiness of this model increased with it's age. They usually are Sunburst with a tortishell pickguard, but 8i0's models are found in other colors. They came out sometime in the early 70's and lasted till 1985 or so. The Harmony H-802 is the older version of that guitar with twin chrome covered P-90 style pickups, and pickup on/off switches. Penny catalogs for $99.99 with a gig bag, strap, and mini-amp.Īs for info on them, I'm one of the few that knows a lot about those. ![]() However, I usually spend around $10-25 on them locally, if not for free. I use those sometimes, they're crazy little guitars, and fun to mod. ![]()
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