Sunday, 21 July 2024

Guitar Reviews 4U - New Gretsch Brian Setzer Hot Rod no Pickguards issue - fitting one to a 6120 Hot Rod Extreme Coolant Green Sparkle guitar

 

Gretsch 6120 Brian Setzer Hot Rod - with or without pick guard? 


Guard or no guard?

No Pickguard didn't work for me on this 6120 Hot Rod - 

why is the 6120 Hot Rod guitar now a 'No-Guard'?

In this project I'll be fitting a guard to it

Brian Setzer has over years played his 6120 guitars with and without fitted Pickguards. Recently Fender dropped the fitment of Pickguards on his model line of 6120 Hot Rod guitars. So are you a Guard on or a Guard off Player? 

A 2005 Lime Gold Brian Setzer Hot Rod -

with solid silver finish Guard fitted from new, undergoing a playing set up

For me I like the Pickguard being in place, for both single notes and rhythm playing. I find the guard is a good place to anchor the hand for precise picking. Having tried this new guard-less Hot Rod, I have decided I need a guard fitted. Hence this project. 

 I'll be using a genuine Hot Rod Pickguard with a twist - 
it will be less the paint - for a reason - keep reading on!


Genuine Gretsch 0060874000 Pickguard Bracket Kit - 
around $15USD, includes 3 screws, spacer and felt pad - 
Using the correct parts reduces error and extra work

I suggest purchasing the genuine parts for this job where cost allows, a genuine guard will most likely fit without need for major adjustments and the correct bracket takes the guesswork out of the job of mounting the guard, plus we know as a genuine part it fits. 

It helps to have an example guitar to work with but if you haven't one to hand, I hope you find these example pictures useful to you in fixing on the guard and bracket when we get to that stage in this article.


Note that the Bracket arm has countersunk holes for the body side screws -
the copied non-genuine versions of this Bracket don't always have these

Before we start the job, the type of Pickguard finish is worth considering - painted or clear see through. I'm fitting a guard to a 6120 Hot Rod with the Green Sparkle finish and I'd rather this finish was visible because it looks so great, but I'd still like to use a genuine Hot Rod guard which is supplied in silver finish to the back face.

If you're ok with using a solid finish guard just fit that and omit the steps below of removing the paint.

The solution for me in this project is to remove the paint from the new guard. I've also covered this paint removal subject in another post specifically related to that job, as many Gretsch owners have asked the question about safely removing the paint. 

I'll briefly cover it here too for purposes of information just giving you what I think is the best solution to achieve that. 

The paint coat is quite thin on the Pickguard and is applied on the back face only, the guards are clear plastic Lucite material and have in this case the 'Gretsch' name, Hot Rod name and Flames logo pressed in at the moulding stage which are then paint filled. So far so good.

The Gretsch name is painted in with black, it is not a decal and the Hot Rod and Flames detail are in silver as the paint colour used on the rest of the guard, using the edges of the moulding to show them in an understated way.

Do NOT use these methods for paint removal!


To remove the paint, I use a 1200grade wet or dry paper used in car bodyshops, wetted with hand warm temperature but not boiling water, to which a couple of drops of washing up liquid has been mixed in with the water. Avoid these other methods listed below in BLUE at all costs!! 

DO NOT Use Acetone - it will melt plastic. DO NOT Use Sandpaper - it will mark the plastic. DO NOT Use Wire Wool - it will scratch the plastic. DO NOT Use Thinners - it may make the plastic go cloudy and ruin the job. DO NOT Use Paint Remover or Paint Stripper - they can melt or affect the guard plastic and plastic clarity by clouding the plastic. Here endeth the lesson!

Here is my method for safe paint removal:

Wet the rear Pickguard painted surface, wet the paper in the water mix and carefully start to rub down the rear of the guard, you'll notice the silver finish particles start to show in the water - this is normal, so you know this is working!

Work carefully rubbing down as you only need to take the thin surface paint layer off. Stop and wipe off the guard back frequently as you work to check your progress in paint removal. 


Use the 1200 grade paper like this

Rewet the guard surface and the abrasive paper each time you work - this water mixture helps lubricate the paper and reduces the scratching of the surface plastic.


The guard is soon getting towards being see through

Remember, the less scratching of the plastic happening, the less work required to fix any problems later on! I'm used to this approach from working on car repaint jobs over the years.

I have left the 'Hot Rod' and Flames logo in silver so that it stands out but is not too obtrusive.

When the surface paint has been removed, use the car body rubbing compound to polish the plastic. T-Cut or Farecla G3 liquid compounds are good for this stage, I have both of these at home in my workshop. I tend to use G3.


Just needs a polish with the G3 Farecla


Polished and rinsed off - result achieved

To use them slightly wet a cloth and use either compound onto the cloth, carefully polishing so that the cloth fabric weave does not leave scratches.


Colour coded hardware to match into the green colour of the guitar
I used a 7mm depth x 10mm width Felt from a Dremel set for the screw 
that goes through the guard into the guitar top as a Spacer
the green paint sealed the Felt and stiffened it slightly

Once a clear finish is achieved, in this case the Black on the Gretsch Logo just stands out, like the Hot Rod and Flames logo does against the clear plastic and the guitar body colour.


Hot Rod 'Phantom Guard' fitted


Pressed in details are not lost in the paint removal


Against the 2005 Lime Gold guitar you can hardly tell this new 
2022 guitar has had a guard added from here!










Guitar Reviews 4U Gretsch Pickguard Paint removal - We show you the best paint removal solution and what NOT to do or use!

 

Gretsch Pickguard Paint removal 

A lot of people are asking about the best way of removing Pickguard paint, I'll show you the best way in easy to follow steps in this article. I also wanted to fit a guard to my Grestch 6120 Brian Setzer Hot Rod and be able to see the Green Sparkle finish.

I'll show you a way of safely removing the Pickguard paint and adding a Hot Rod Clear Pickguard to show off your Gretsch guitar's great paint finish! Here's how...

to make a 'Phantom Guard' - for your 6120 Brian Setzer Hot Rod!

Gretsch Brian Setzer Hot Rod Pickguard - 
What is the best Paint removal method? Read on and find out.....

I recently purchased this 6120 Hot Rod in Extreme Coolant Green Sparkle. The lack of a Pickguard was a big issue as it made playing it less easy so I have decided to fit a guard, but at the same time have one that allows you to see the great finish as much as possible. Here is the 'Phantom Guard' job.


Gretsch Brian Setzer 6120 - Extreme Green Sparkle! - no guard - yet...

Having both versions of 6120 Hot Rod guitars I also don't want to lose the ability to see the paint finish on the green one - its of the best aesthetics of the guitar . So, I want to avoid a solid painted finish guard. The Silver paint is only on the rear face of the pickguard, so here is how to remove it. Safely!


The 2022 Green Sparkle (L) and 2005 Lime Gold Hot Rods (R) -
The genuine 6120 Hot Rod Pickguard will fit both guitars is the good news

I did order an aftermarket non genuine 6120 Guard in clear plastic sheet for this project but it was not to the same dimensions, after seeing the paint removal question, the solution was to modify a proper Gretsch one. The obvious part to use for this project was the Hot Rod 6120 Guard, a made in Japan part, available as a spare part.



Genuine Gretsch Brian Setzer Hot Rod silver paint backed Pickguard

For some guitar colours, the silver painted guard would look great against the paint, but on this sparkle finish 6120 I think the guitar finish is so 'mega' that it has to be shown in all its glory. 


Pickguard reverse showing pressed in details

The bonus is that on the genuine Gretsch Hot Rod guard, the Gretsch name and the Hot Rod name and flames logo are pressed into the guard during manufacture so there is no issue of any decal or paint loss during any paint removal being likely using my method.

The solution to me was therefore quite obvious - buy a silver backed Hot Rod guard and make it see through. I've seen many posts about people wanting to know the best method of paint removal from a Pickguard. So here are the methods to use and those to avoid, based on my years of car restoration and painting work experience.

Firstly, the things to definitely avoid doing or using to remove the paint -


Here's why not to use these - from left to right above, explained below:

Sandpaper scratches too deep, Steel Wool is dirty, scraping is harsh and hard on the hands, Acetone (Nail polish remover) melts plastic so is a big no, Paint stripper may also damage the plastic and Thinners may attack or cloud the plastic material of the guard.

So now you know what not to use and why.

The best method to use for a clear Pickguard is here below

It is - Wet or Dry car bodyshop paper, used wet with washing up liquid

I've been around car restoration since 1982 and paint is one major area I have worked with on cars and I have also sprayed guitars I have built or refinished. So, to get the silver off the Pickguard back surface, I use a 1200 Grit grade Wet or Dry paper with water.


Pickguard reverse view and 1200 Grit paper

The warm water in a bowl used for the rubbing down has a few small drops of washing up liquid added in the warm water, the water should be to hand warm temperature no hotter. 

Wet the pickguard rear face first, this has the paint area we are going to remove on and we will be only working on this side of the guard.


Work the wetted paper over the Pickguard on the 'long side' direction
(In the direction of the arrows as above)
Avoid working in 'swirl' patterns as they may take more polishing later

Wet the guard rear face and wet the paper, then start by rubbing the wetted paper (abrasive side down to the work surface) working from one end to the other along the 'longest side' direction of the Pickguard.  Use a light pressure on the paper only, it minimises scratching. You only want to remove the paint layer on the back of the guard, not key the surface for later painting! 

Stop and check progress and also re-wet the paper frequently during the work, this helps to avoid scratches and over working the job. We are only removing the paint layer back to the clear plastic on this job.


You'll quickly see the paint has started to be removed 
as we have daylight showing through, above the flames logo


In a few minutes we have most of the paint removed -

Do keep the paper wet to avoid it dragging and scratching!

Regularly wash the paper during this operation and change it to a new cutting area as you go, rinse the rear of the plate too in the water to keep it wet for the work. The 1200 grade paper is a good compromise grade as it is less likely to lead to more scratching and clean up work with polishing, later on. 

A harsher paper grit grade may be quicker to use but the polishing may take longer to resolve any scratches left. Check along the guard edges as paint can remain there.


The indented parts retain the paint, we want to keep this for this situation
as seen in this rear side of the guard view


One 'Phantom guard' clear of paint - just requires a polish!
see how the name and flames logo left stand out - just what we want

Now you are at this stage of the work, check to see no paint remains on the guard edges, once that is all clear, wash the guard off under a cold water tap and dry the guard off on a towel or kitchen paper.


At this stage, the guard may look a bit 'foggy' - this will soon polish off

There is still some paint residue to remove on the edges here, but not much

Now we need to do the polish up job, I use Farecla G3 Rubbing compound, used in car body shops to polish paint after spraying. T-Cut also works for this job too, I tend to use the Farecla G3  as it is quite neutral and has no harmful (to my skin) residues or solvents. It is also not too harsh in abrasiveness on the surface to be polished.

Wet a small scrap of clean soft cloth, add on a small toothpaste size blob amount of G3 paste and start polishing the pickguard in the same 'long side' pattern you did to remove the paint. 

As you will see from the cloth below, at this early stage of polishing the G3 has rubbed off the remaining bonded micro layer of paint from the plastic guard material that has keyed into the Pickguard surface. This is good to see, you will soon have removed any trace of this.


Using Farecla G3 rubbing compound, you can see the last of the Silver paint -
this is normal and any remaining paint is quite quickly removed by polishing work.

Work and check the progress, remember to keep the cloth slightly damp to help lubricate the polishing and to slightly dilute the polishing paste. It should not take long to get the guard free of paint, abrasions and clear to see through, then wash and dry off.


Wet the guard off occasionally to see progress - 
we are getting there quite nicely.


The logos are still present and visible - but so is the guitar's finish -
so we are achieving the end result!

A quick test fit to show what I was trying to achieve here. 
Top view - 'Audience view.'


Pickguard test fit - it is almost invisible! -
Next is to prepare the hardware for fitting the guard

As we have achieved the Pickguard near invisibility, we need to consider the mounting bracket - of which we will use a genuine Gretsch one, disguised to blend in as much as we can with the finish on the guitar top in this case.



A new pickguard 6120 Bracket - I could only get a gold plated one -
this has countersunk holes on the foot - shown here for the screw head flush fit


The gold plating is a thinnish flash coat and was easily polished off 
back to the chrome - here we can then prepare it for a colour coat


A metallic Lime Green metallic car paint was used as my base coat -
two thin and fairly translucent coats to help hide this against the paint top.


The bracket was then sprayed with a clear lacquer from a can -
I sprinkled on some layers of Green Sparkle custom car paint metal flakes

Once the bracket had been painted over, I used a spray coat of clear acrylic lacquer and sprinkled on some green metallic metal flakes used in custom car paint onto the wet clear acrylic surface.

I carefully damped this down with a tissue to bed it into the clear coat when it was near to dry. I did this a couple of times and then left it overnight to dry out each time. I then applied a brush coat of Tamiya Acrylic clear coat over the sparkle coat, using one coat per day over 3 days and left it to harden for a day between applications.


You can see the clear guard and the bracket in Green Sparkle! -

The Green will make the bracket blend in better than a plain chrome one.

The fixing parts are something to consider next, I had a screw to fit the plate to the guitar top which saved me a lot of money as the genuine part and bush is expensive for what it is. A 15mm length x 2mm screw should be fine for this job. 

This should just be flush with the inside of the guitar top and not snag any wiring running underneath the wooden top of the guitar. I did cut mine to length and filed the end to take off any burrs before fitting.

When drilling the hole for the top plate screw, do it carefully with a cordless drill at low speed, this will help the drill not go through the top and cause any damage to any wiring under the maple top board of the guitar.

The screw cut to 15mm length should then screw in and remain flush with the underside of the top board.


Three mounting screws, Felt spacer, plastic spacer disc and Bracket 
Colour matched to merge in with the guitar paintwork

The mounting parts are going to be 'colour coded' so that they merge in with the guitar colour more than if left unpainted. The Felt Spacer is actually a Dremel Hobby Tool polishing felt pad and quite firm, it is 7mm thickness x 10mm diameter so ideal to go under the Pickguard.


The 'Ghost Guard' is now in place -  
the sparkle finish Bracket merges in quite well

The 10mm width of the Felt allows it to provide support to the underside of the guard. I gave it a couple of light coats of green acrylic which will seal and firm up the Felt fibres and also tint it to merge in to the guitar colour better than the plain white of the original felt. 

The Felt had a hole for the Dremel Mandrel to go through so I did not have to make a new hole for the screw to pass through. So this was a bonus too.


The Logo and name were left on the plate and stand out -
they are not too obtrusive to the eye and tell you it's a genuine Hot Rod part!

The Gretsch equivalent spacer part is a plastic piece of tube - used as a spacer. The Felt being wider adds a bit more stability I think than the thin wall plastic tube.


The job has worked out really well and achieved the objective -
a clear guard, using Hot Rod Gretsch genuine parts

The screw crown tops were lightly sanded with 1200 grade to remove the Gold flash plating and then painted with transparent Tamiya clear Green acrylic and given a clear coat to seal them and help them merge in with the guitar.

The white plastic plastic disc is a spacer, it goes under the Pickguard Bracket for the nut. A Black Felt disc goes under the guard and is hardly visible as it is over an F-Hole. 


See my note in this picture about the screw hole 
for the body to Bracket screws positioning!

The drill bits you need to use may vary in size for the screws you use but for the genuine Gretsch Japan screws for the Bracket side mounting, I used a 1.5mm to make the holes for these smaller Bracket to body side screws and a 2.5mm for the top screw through the plate into the body - however, I had this screw in stock - so you may need to check against your drill bits selection to match a drill of the right size to the screw before doing the job.

REMEMBER - MEASURE AND CHECK BEFORE YOU DRILL!
Then check again....

I recommend that you use masking tape under where you want to drill the bracket, firstly, it is easy to mark onto the tape with a permanent Sharpie type fine liner and secondly it helps stop the drill bit slipping and damaging the paint.

Loose assemble the guard to the Bracket so you can move them but not so they slide around. Try the guard on the guitar top. Locate so the guard it fits around the Pickups and also has a 1mm or so gap against the side of the neck - basically as long as it is not smack up against the neck when fixed down. When this done, you can nip the nut and screw up but don't overdo it or you can crack the guard. 

Note the bracket position in the photo - it points back toward the E string end of the Tunamatic bridge - this is handy to know if you don't have another guitar as a pattern to copy from.

I then test fitted my Felt to the screw through the Pickguard and tried the Pickguard on the guitar before drilling anything! I checked it off against the guard on the Lime Gold 6120 Hot Rod.

Once I was sure all was right, I carefully drilled the Bracket guard holes into the body and fitted the screws, then aligned the guard on the top and drilled that. One point here before you drill the top hole into the body top is that the Bracket guard has a slot that allows some traverse movement which you may require, to get the guard to line up correctly on the top. So do check before you drill!


The job is now done - from here you can hardly tell the green 6120 has a Pickguard!
only a slight shadow from the green sparkle bracket gives it away.

This Pickguard addition has made this 6120 Hot Rod a different guitar to play.
It is just such a better guitar to play with the guard being added. It adds precision to the right hand placement for single notes, solos and chord playing.

I hope that this post has shown you how easy it is to safely remove the paint from a Gretsch Pickguard and also how to add a guard to a Brian Setzer 6120 Hot Rod guitar!


















Wednesday, 17 July 2024

Watch reviews 4U - ** Beware of the Refund Fishing Watch Service Scam** - Got a scammer from Ebay tried it on me. How to be aware of this new scam.

Watch Reviews 4U alert

**New Refund Fishing Luxury Watch Service Scam Alert !!!**


The Refund Fishing Luxury Watch Service Scam - Don't fall victim to these people -
This isn't the watch involved in the deal, its just something nice to look at before you read this stomach churning new scam and this watch is safe in my watch box.

The vast majority of the people you deal with on places like Ebay are great people to deal with and I have no problem with them or the transaction. Every so often and thankfully very rarely you get a bad transactor. A new scam has recently come along and here's how it works. DON'T GET CAUGHT!! 

Here is the Refund Fishing Watch Service Scam.

I recently sold a watch on Ebay which was an almost 5 year old luxury automatic Swiss watch in about as mint in the box with papers as you can get and all seemed well and good with the sale, it was delivered safely and payment went through ok. The buyer says he was delighted with it and it reported that it keeps very good time - 10 seconds a day. Nice 5* feedback. Thank you.

Fast forward a month and I get a mail from the buyer via Ebay messaging, he is just out of the 30 day Ebay money back guarantee time - he reports that he has wound the watch and it no longer goes. He then says it will need a full service to rectify the 'fault' and this will cost £450 of which he wants me to contribute. Done his homework on the service cost. Alarm bells time.

He is spouting Baloney and is at best a 'chancer' and at worst a 'scammer' I say he is both. A watch only gets a clean, oil and regulation on a service if nothing untoward otherwise is existing as you all know. 

Servicing a watch 'broken' by winding will not resolve the issue, but if the buyer is scamming you and just wants a free service on you, then he's got one if you pay up, or are scared it into it by what is essentially a con artist/chancer.

So, I was curious as to why my 'almost as new condition from the shop quality Swiss Watch with little use', having kept excellent time is now 'broken', in response I proposed to the buyer that he take it or send it into a registered for the brand jeweller and have it examined. At least he broke it.

I said that I would like to see their written report, estimate of work and list of any parts and costs required and have contact details of the watch examiner so that I can verify and discuss the situation with them. 

In other words see I am not being scammed. I don't think that is unreasonable. I'm just playing him along as I suspect he is trying to scam me as I know this is out of time on Ebay.

I don't think that is unreasonable to ask for this information if the claim was true, if you are legit and have nothing to hide and the issue is genuine although in this case he is outside of the Ebay limit and obviously trying it on to get more money out of me,which is the refund fishing scam objective. 

He replies to my 'suggestion' of the watch examination but the clincher is that he makes no mention of even considering this inspection in his reply. So, he's only after money and a con artist.

Instead, the buyer comes back with bluff and bluster and states he is 'an authority on the watch movement' and that the watch 'of this age requires a service.' Well, give him that approaching 5 years old the watch MAY need a service - next year, not now and as it is running at 10 seconds a day accuracy as he states, so I would say to him 'get on your bike sunbeam' and pay for the service yourself. 

The buyer makes no mention of agreeing to have the watch examined, which is a definite giveaway so it a definite attempt at scamming me for the money. I forgot to say that the buyer also offered me £250 less than the asking price on Ebay where he purchased it from me so the cad is already up on the deal. And greedy. Which is his undoing, like most criminals. 

It's the modus operandi of most blackmailers and con artists, they keep coming back if you pay them. So, if I pay now, what happens in a few months when another spurious 'breakage' happens with a watch part, will he come back with his hand out again? I'm not paying now or anytime soon and if he comes back he is in big legal trouble with the Police whom I shall pass this matter onto and where to find him as I have his name and address.

So this is how the Refund Fishing Watch Service Scam' works. I have already alerted Ebay to his modus operandi and if I do hear from him again the Police can deal with him.

Stay safe fellow watch lovers. Spread the word. Safe trading!



Saturday, 6 July 2024

Guitar Reviews 4U - Gretsch 6120SHLTV Brian Setzer 6120 Hot Rod in Lime Gold with TV Jones Filtertron Pickups from 2005

Gretsch 6120 Brian Setzer Hot Rod Lime Gold with TV Jones Filtertrons 

Brian Setzer in a Hot Rod - with a Lime Gold 6120 Hot Rod guitar! 

The Gretsch Brian Setzer 6120 Hot Rod model guitars have been around since the late 1990's  and are built on Brian Setzer's ethos of modification - which he has long had from his interest in Hot Rod cars, which by their very nature are anything but unmodified!

This situation was taken on further down the road by Brian Setzer with Gretsch and from this venture the 'Hot Rod' guitar based on the Chet Atkins 6120 model came into being. 


 The review guitar Gretsch 6120 Brian Setzer Hot Rod 2005 - in Lime Gold 

Brian's original Gretsch 6120 was variously modified over the years and the joint project has built on that idea since, from the 'Bare Bones' wiring circuit featuring no tone controls and only a volume knob and a pickup selector switch digging into that turf. 


Stripped down bare bones controls and stunning Lime Gold finish 

The 'minimalist' ethos was taken further with unbound F-Holes, the Pickguard did gain a 'flames motif' image and the 'Hot Rod' name moulded in to it. This Pickguard was dropped around 2020 from the guitar completely and this was likely on a cost basis. Personally I prefer them fitted and I will be fitting one to a 2021 6120 Hot Rod in another review soon.


The Serial number on the label shows TV Jones option factory fitted Pickups -
New for 2004 year was 1959 Trestle Bracing, introduced on the Brian Setzer signature guitars. The update was also incorporated into the Hot Rod model line at this time.

The Hot Rod series guitars were available with either stock Filtertrons or TV Jones factory fitted Filtertrons until recently, this particular example above has TV Jones Pickups fitted as stock from the factory as shown on the label. The 2020 onwards have TV Jone Brian Setzer pickups as standard.


The silver paint backed (on the reverse side) Hot Rod Pickguard - 
This item is now discontinued as fitment on the 2020 and later Hot Rod guitars - 
my personal view is it should be included for the owners to fit if desired

The options of TV Jones or Standard Pickups was no doubt a headache for production and guitar retailers as essentially the same basic guitars were offered with those two Pickup options, duplicating guitars to make or stock, rather than offer the TVJ option as a special order, which from both perspectives would have been more sensible. The 2021 onwards guitars now feature only the new treblier sounding Brian Setzer signature TV Jones pickups.



The Serial number decals have now been replaced by a Brian Setzer Signature decal 
The JT stands for Japan and Terada - Terada is the factory that makes these guitars.


Sperzl Locking Tuners became standard fitment -
originally they were non-locking Grover types on the early guitars. 

The Hot Rod Label was dropped in 2015 and the plain Truss Rod cover 
was replaced with a 'Hot Rod' themed engraved one. This has now reverted.

The Maple neck is a slim slightly V shape and is a delight to play, it has the smaller 1958/59 era headstock shape which suits it. It is a 22 fret 24.5" scale neck and is topped with a bound Ebony fretboard, early models had a Rosewood board and the later 2021 guitars onwards have Rosewood too. The Ebony board is smooth and feels great. The radius is 12". 



A c.2008 advert for the Brian Setzer Hot Rod guitars - 
Brian Setzer is holding a Lime Gold model - one he used. 

Hardware is chrome finish on the guitar and on this model it has the old screw on Barrel Strap holders rather than the Schaller Strap Locks which I had on a 2008 one, which were probably standard fitment by then.


The 'candy' metallic Lime Gold paint is a 'trick paint' - see the different colour
hues depending on how the light falls on it. The paint has small reflective particles 
which can be seen if you look very closely at the paint. Hot Rod cars have trick paint jobs where the paint in one light seems to change from the base colour.


The current 2024 6120 Lime Gold Hot Rod -
now less Pickguard and with Rosewood Fretboard and
the new Brian Setzer TV Jones Filtertron pickups

So, how does this guitar sound. Pretty good. This example was purchased used at £1850 and had been reduced in price. The strings were a motley selection of gauges obviously to the taste of the previous owner and overall the guitar hardly shows any real signs of use. 

The guitar had not been set up or restrung by the shop prior to sale and the certificate and paperwork was missing. The lack of set up from a 'professional guitar dealer' is sadly not uncommon, I have had this on 3 previous guitars purchased recently.


The current 2024 6120 uses Gotoh Locking Tuners 
and the serial number decal is gone in favour of a signature decal

A Vanson Roller Tunamatic Bridge was fitted before restringing and doing the intonation and then the setup was done, with adjustment at the nut to make it really play well. Having owned a 90's example Hot Rod and a 2008 Hot Rod I was not surprised by the feel of the guitar, it was really nice.

The sound really is mostly dictated by the amplifier setting as tone controls and circuit doesn't figure here, but on a clean amplifier sound with a slight hint of chorus and reverb the guitar sounds quite jazzy on the front pickup, middle has its own combination sound of the two and the bridge is clean and cutting. Against the new TV Jones Brian Setzer pickups they sound a bit less bright, the new TV Jones are made to sound more like a single coil.

Rhythm playing when the guitar is set up properly is good and easy and on the clean sounds which I use mostly it sounds great, I would use it with a jazz or swing band like this. The lead sound is good and the playing is slick, the new 2020 and later version with 9.5 - 12" compound radius is slightly easier to play but most will not really worry about this difference.

It is surprising how even a small amount of work will turn this guitar from barely playable to very playable.


The current and the by now vintage versions of the 6120 Hot Rod - 

Both are really nice guitars - the 2005 one is quite original and 
has the collector's appeal - both are excellent guitars in any case!