Post by robertlavin on Sept 10, 2019 16:33:34 GMT -5
So, the thing with buying a cheap, old guitar and resurrecting it into something great is that makes you want to do more...
There's a Harmony H6565N near me for not a lot of money. Looks in good nick but I can't find any info about them. Nothing on the unofficial Harmony DB.
I've read something about spruce grained Birch tops and birch laminates but for a different model and I've frankly no idea what that might sound like - although I think Levin used that combination in some of their instruments.
Do / did Harmony have a systematic numbering system such that each digit in the model number tells you something about the guitar?
...and what do they sound like? Bassy, trebly, boxy? What's the Harmony house style?
So, the thing with buying a cheap, old guitar and resurrecting it into something great is that makes you want to do more...
There's a Harmony H6565N near me for not a lot of money. Looks in good nick but I can't find any info about them. Nothing on the unofficial Harmony DB.
I've read something about spruce grained Birch tops and birch laminates but for a different model and I've frankly no idea what that might sound like - although I think Levin used that combination in some of their instruments.
Do / did Harmony have a systematic numbering system such that each digit in the model number tells you something about the guitar?
...and what do they sound like? Bassy, trebly, boxy? What's the Harmony house style?
I believe the 6000 series guitars were made in the 70's as Harmony was on it's way out. Don't waste your time. Look for one that's in the Harmony database.