Fender Champion Lap Steel Serial Numbers

Buying a new guitar is a considerable investment for most of us. To get the best possible experience, it is therefore important that. Anyone know how I could find out anything from the serial number on what I am told is a 1953 Fender Champ lap steel. I use it for a wall decoration. Last edited by Niels Andrews on 26 Feb 2012 10:34 am; edited 2 times in total.
1952 Fender Champion Lap Steel. These old Fender Lap Steel are a bit hard to date accurately. Fender started making this model around 1948 and my best guess using serial number and pot codes is this one was probably made around 1952. These Champion Lap Steel used the same pickups as. Fender Champ lap steel circa 1953 perfect conditions. Please note: the guitar is completely original BUT the electrics that's been swapped with another coming from a Telecaster. The curious thing, as specified in the title: the last digit of the serial number seems to have been engraved twice due a mistake.
Tuners have been replaced on this one 1952 Fender Champion Lap Steel. These old Fender Lap Steel are a bit hard to date accurately. Fender started making this model around 1948 and my best guess using serial number and pot codes is this one was probably made around 1952.
These Champion Lap Steel used the same pickups as the early Fender Broadcasters. It is quite hard to find these intact with all original parts. Blacksite Area 51 Russound Ca4.
People snatch the pickups and dome knobs off of these to pick on Telecasters. This one looks to to be all original.
Came in a original hard case that is still in great shape. GE Smith was highly inspired by his very early 1948 Fender Champion Lap Steel and his signature Fender Telecaster shows this. GE had Fender use the same style for the fret markers and mounted the bridge pickup directly into the wood. GE Smith Tele was inspired by Fender Lap Steel I am a horrible lap steel player, but still a fun time trying. Nice Vintage Fender Champ Lap Steel Demo Tunings I learned from several sources including Wikipedia Lap steel guitars are not tuned in standard guitar tuning (E-A-D-G-B-E, low to high).
Usually they are tuned to an open chord like G, D, E or even A. Sometimes an extended chord like a 6th, 7th, or 9th. During the 1920s and 1930s, much of the sheet music written for lap steel utilized open A tuning as the de facto standard tuning for the instrument. Most Rock and Blues players use open G/open A or open D/open E. Joe Perry of Aerosmith uses Open E on his electric lap steel. David Lindley is another player who uses transposed variations of these tunings. Radio Mirchi Murga With Naved Download.
Open G is tuned D-G-D-G-B-D Open A is tuned E-A-E-A-C#-E Open D is tuned D-A-D-F#-A-D Open E is tuned E-B-E-G#-B-E Bluegrass and Country Dobro players using a square-neck instrument tend to favor an altered G tuning, often called “High-G”, where the 6th string is tuned up to “G” instead of down to “D”, and the 5th string is also tuned up, to B: G-B-D-G-B-D. They also sometimes raise it up to “High-A”: A-C#-E-A-C#-E. These tunings are possible on a lap steel or square neck Dobro that can take the extra stress, but could cause damage on a round-neck resonator or standard guitar. Dobro players also generally use a set of strings with different gauges than those used on standard electric or acoustic guitars to help them to project more sound and to achieve their higher tunings.
Modified C6 tuning, with a Bb in the bass: Bb-E-G-A-C-E Western Swing and Country lap steel players generallyy use a C6 tuning. There is no one ‘standard” C6 tuning. A popular one is C-E-G-A-C-E.
This tuning is a good for those old Hank Williams records. The E7 tuning is used when learning with the Mel Bay Steel Guitar Method instructional books. E7 tuning is B0-D-E-G#-B-E or with the 6th string lowered to the tonic E: E-D-E-G#-B-E Also see more about Lap Steel and different tunings.