Sarah,
Unfortunately I do not know those precise measurements. I believe the scale length is 22 1/2" but not certain. Also those PDF drawings are of the current made in Mexico version and I'm not sure if they are the same scale length. I've looked at the MIM Duo Sonics, unfortunately they don't have a rosewood fretboard, plus the body has the scooped out backside like a Stratocaster. On the 'cheap' side, I already have the pickups, body and neck wood, so it shouldn't be too much of an expense to build.
Paul,
I believe the color is called desert tan. It is an opaque paint and with the cream pickguard and chocolate colored pickup covers it's a stunning combination. Here is a photo that shows the color a little better.
Project: Duo Sonic
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Re: Fender Duo Sonic
Danny Ellison
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Re: Fender Duo Sonic
____________________
1965 Mosrite Celebrity Prototype with Vibramute
1972 Mosrite Celebrity-III
1977 Gibson MK-53
1982 Fender Bullet
1994 Gretsch Streamliner G3155 Custom
2005 Gibson Les Paul Standard Plus
2006 Jude Les Paul 12 String
1965 Mosrite Celebrity Prototype with Vibramute
1972 Mosrite Celebrity-III
1977 Gibson MK-53
1982 Fender Bullet
1994 Gretsch Streamliner G3155 Custom
2005 Gibson Les Paul Standard Plus
2006 Jude Les Paul 12 String
- MWaldorf
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Hey Danny, I've got a scale photo printed across 9 pages, and I'll drop that in the mail to you today.
Mel
Mel
Oy vey - it's MESHUGGA BEACH PARTY - The world's premier Jewish Surf Music Band!
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MWaldorf wrote:Hey Danny, I've got a scale photo printed across 9 pages, and I'll drop that in the mail to you today.
Mel
Great! Thanks Mel.
And thanks to all who offered assistance.
Danny Ellison
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Re: Fender Duo Sonic
The color you are referring to is Desert Sand, and it is merely primer with a marketing spin.
Adam
Adam
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dorkrockrecords wrote:The color you are referring to is Desert Sand, and it is merely primer with a marketing spin.
Adam
On the one I had it was not a primer but a high gloss lacquer without a clear coat.
Danny Ellison
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Fair enough, but Desert Sand was the undercoat commonly used on Fender's custom colors.
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Re: Fender Duo Sonic
Hey! I had one of those for years! It was already a parts guitar when I bought the basic parts for $145.00 (the exact amount of my tax return) from Eric Rosenfeld in 1978.
I was in the repair shop of the Record Garage in Cambridge, (lovingly referred to as the Wreckage Garage,) purveyors of spiffed-up parts guitars sold as the real thing, as well as parts despoilers of vintage guitars in for repairs, (don't trust those pots codes boys, they've been at it for a long time!) when I saw a maple Duosonic neck sticking out of the necks leaning in the corner. Further rummaging yielded a body, inexpertly refinished in already-disintegrating sunburst, and the 'gold' anodized pickguard assembly with no pickups and a slide switch on the treble bout. I also found the chocolate-colored pickup covers, but no pickups. The stock bridge was on the body, hanging by one screw. Eric swapped them for my check.
The maple neck was beautiful; a fifties maple Fender neck thin as a spindle, with wear grooves all up the fretboard. It was 3/4 scale length,and a warm golden orange. Had to have it.
But there was no way for me to make it stock. Inside of the pickup cavities there were signs of the original color, but I thought it was some kind of primer.There appeared to be no ground wire, apparently unnecessary as the metal pickguard touched both the tailpiece and the electronics. I had gotten a hold of two old Strat staggered pole pickups while rousing through the huge drawer full of parts, and put them in.
I got it refinished in Chevy Truck Blue as Eddie Murray called it, and put an SG toggle switch instead of the slide switch.
The result was quite presentable, I thought. The bright blue, about the color of Johnny Ramone's guitar, went well with the gold pickguard. On those short-scale necks you can do fantastic stretches and fast runs.
As a stage guitar (it played many, many shows back in the day) it had a few shortcomings.
No three-quarter is ever going to deliver the tone like a full scale. Onstage, they sound like they have a cold. You can learn to live in the cramped space on the neck, (I liked it,) but they're harder to tune and hard to keep in tune.
That said, they're a blast to flip around and do tricks on. They're So Cute and they make you try things that would not occur to you in a bigger neck.
Years later, I traded it to Cambridge Music Center for a copper-colored Danelectro I wanted. They told me that the staggered-pole strat pickups were worth more than the whole guitar. Who knew? I had picked them at random from the junk drawer.
One aspect of this guitar never occurred to me until it was too late.
My son, 13, of whom I had no idea was interested in guitar, said to me, "What happened to the blue guitar?" I told him. His face crumpled.
"You ruin everything!" he said.
Don't sell your Duo's, boys.
I was in the repair shop of the Record Garage in Cambridge, (lovingly referred to as the Wreckage Garage,) purveyors of spiffed-up parts guitars sold as the real thing, as well as parts despoilers of vintage guitars in for repairs, (don't trust those pots codes boys, they've been at it for a long time!) when I saw a maple Duosonic neck sticking out of the necks leaning in the corner. Further rummaging yielded a body, inexpertly refinished in already-disintegrating sunburst, and the 'gold' anodized pickguard assembly with no pickups and a slide switch on the treble bout. I also found the chocolate-colored pickup covers, but no pickups. The stock bridge was on the body, hanging by one screw. Eric swapped them for my check.
The maple neck was beautiful; a fifties maple Fender neck thin as a spindle, with wear grooves all up the fretboard. It was 3/4 scale length,and a warm golden orange. Had to have it.
But there was no way for me to make it stock. Inside of the pickup cavities there were signs of the original color, but I thought it was some kind of primer.There appeared to be no ground wire, apparently unnecessary as the metal pickguard touched both the tailpiece and the electronics. I had gotten a hold of two old Strat staggered pole pickups while rousing through the huge drawer full of parts, and put them in.
I got it refinished in Chevy Truck Blue as Eddie Murray called it, and put an SG toggle switch instead of the slide switch.
The result was quite presentable, I thought. The bright blue, about the color of Johnny Ramone's guitar, went well with the gold pickguard. On those short-scale necks you can do fantastic stretches and fast runs.
As a stage guitar (it played many, many shows back in the day) it had a few shortcomings.
No three-quarter is ever going to deliver the tone like a full scale. Onstage, they sound like they have a cold. You can learn to live in the cramped space on the neck, (I liked it,) but they're harder to tune and hard to keep in tune.
That said, they're a blast to flip around and do tricks on. They're So Cute and they make you try things that would not occur to you in a bigger neck.
Years later, I traded it to Cambridge Music Center for a copper-colored Danelectro I wanted. They told me that the staggered-pole strat pickups were worth more than the whole guitar. Who knew? I had picked them at random from the junk drawer.
One aspect of this guitar never occurred to me until it was too late.
My son, 13, of whom I had no idea was interested in guitar, said to me, "What happened to the blue guitar?" I told him. His face crumpled.
"You ruin everything!" he said.
Don't sell your Duo's, boys.
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Re: Fender Duo Sonic
Quite a story Twango. As for short scales and stage use, there must be a way to make it work. This guy managed a few gigs with a 20 3/4" scale guitar:
Oy vey - it's MESHUGGA BEACH PARTY - The world's premier Jewish Surf Music Band!
What? Couldn't tell the logo is a link? So click here, what's the hold up? http://www.meshuggabeachparty.com
What? Couldn't tell the logo is a link? So click here, what's the hold up? http://www.meshuggabeachparty.com
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Re: Fender Duo Sonic
Aah, yes...still very nice, whatever the name for this 'rose'dubtrub wrote:Paul,
I believe the color is called desert tan. It is an opaque paint and with the cream pickguard and chocolate colored pickup covers it's a stunning combination. Here is a photo that shows the color a little better.
Sarah, Danny already has the bodywood...but perhaps he may want to build TWO now, heh.
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