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  2. Fender Telecaster Thinline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Telecaster_Thinline

    The Fender Telecaster Thinline is a semi-hollow guitar made by the Fender company. It is a Telecaster with body cavities. Designed by German luthier Roger Rossmeisl in 1968, [1] it was introduced in 1969 and updated in 1972 by replacing the standard Telecaster pickups with a pair of Fender Wide Range humbucking pickups, bullet truss-rod and 3-bolt neck.

  3. Ovation Guitar Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovation_Guitar_Company

    Improved synthetics techniques from helicopter engineering control vibrations in the bowl. Ovation developed a thin neck, striving for the feel of an electric guitar's neck, but with additional strength from layers of mahogany and maple reinforced by a steel rod in an aluminum channel. [5] The composite materials and thin necks reduced weight.

  4. Ibanez GIO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibanez_GIO

    The budget version of the Ibanez RX series (Similar in design to the RG, and with a similarly thin neck, but 22 frets rather than 24). The neck profile is based on the 22 fret RX-series neck. There are a number of configurations for this model including the use of pick-guards, humbuckers and single coil pickups.

  5. Acoustic guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_guitar

    The steel-strings increased tension on the neck; for stability, Martin reinforced the neck with a steel truss rod, which became standard in later steel-string guitars. [13] Many acoustic guitars incorporate rosettes around the sound hole. An acoustic guitar can be amplified by using various types of pickups or microphones.

  6. Selmer guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selmer_guitar

    He produced plastic classical and steel-string guitars — of similar shape to his Selmer designs, albeit with F-holes — in the 1950s and 60s, along with many musical and non-musical plastic products. Produced first under his own name, and after 1964 under the name "Mastro", the guitars were of short scale, but accurately fretted and intonated.

  7. Gibson L-5 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_L-5

    Comedian and singer George Gobel had a special version of the Gibson L-5 archtop guitar custom designed and gifted to him by his friend Milton Berle in 1958, the "L-5CT" (cutaway, thin), featuring diminished dimensions of neck scale (24 3/4") and body depth (2 3/8"), befitting his own small stature, and a cherry red finish (for optimal ...

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