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  2. Rowe Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rowe_Industries

    Harold "Harry" DeArmond (January 28, 1906 – October 12, 1999) was an industrial designer of electrical components. His younger brother John was a budding guitarist at age 10 but wanted to make his guitar louder and better-sounding, and in 1935 created a magnetic pickup using components from the ignition coil of a Ford Model A.

  3. Kustom Amplification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kustom_Amplification

    Model numbers were similar to the amplifiers of the time, with the K-200 being a semi-hollow body instrument with a cats-eye sound hole giving it a somewhat Rickenbacker-style look. It was equipped with two single coil DeArmond pickups, a bound neck, a steel nut, and a rosewood fretboard with multiple dot inlays beginning with four for each ...

  4. Harmony Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmony_Company

    The pickups on almost all electric guitars and basses that Harmony produced were manufactured by Rowe Industries Inc. (later known as H.N. Rowe & Company, Rowe DeArmond Inc., and DeArmond Inc.) of Toledo, Ohio. Many of the instrument amplifiers badged with the Harmony name were manufactured by "Sound Projects Company" of Cicero, Illinois. [3]

  5. Single coil guitar pickup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_coil_guitar_pickup

    [4] [5] These pickups have a large, flat coil with adjustable steel screws as pole pieces, and a pair of flat alnico bar magnets lying under the coil bobbin. The adjustable pole pieces pick up the magnetism from the magnets. Moving the screw closer or further away from the magnet determines signal strength, thus tone as well.

  6. Category:Guitar pickups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Guitar_pickups

    Guitar pickups category lists essential models of pickups, ones that played important role in modern music, have an easily recognized "signature" sound, etc. See also Guitar pickup manufacturers . Subcategories

  7. Acoustic-electric guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic-electric_guitar

    The first commercially available electric pickup however were Harry DeArmond's FHC pickups, released in the 1930s. [5] They were widely adopted because they did not require any modification of the guitar. [5] In 1954, Gibson released the first commercially successful flattop acoustic-electric guitars, the J–160E and CF-100E. [6]

  8. Rickenbacker 300 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rickenbacker_300_Series

    Rickenbacker guitars sold in Europe had traditional f-shaped sound holes until the 1980s. This was at the request of European instrument dealers, who were afraid that buyer response to the non-traditional "slash" sound holes would be poor. An example is the 1996, a (now discontinued) reissue of the export version of the 325.

  9. H. H. Scott, Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._H._Scott,_Inc.

    E.H. Scott Radio Laboratories is sometimes confused with H.H. Scott. E.H. Scott was founded in 1925 by Chicago resident Ernest H. Scott. Its first product was the World's Record Super 8, a TRF (tuned radio frequency) design with typical harness wiring with 16 gauge silvered solid core copper wire employed in an array configuration that was typical to radios at the time. This construction ...

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