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Vega guitars serial numbers
Vega guitars serial numbers










vega guitars serial numbers

Materials: Handcarved bookmatched solid spruce top arched curly maple back and sides solid one-piece Honduras mahogany neck Brazilian rosewood fingerboard with variegated inlay bound fingerboard and body.

vega guitars serial numbers

On which instrument(s) you're looking for, and we'll be happy to contactīody size at lower bout: 17" Scale length: 25"įinish: Original sunburst finish, nitrocellulose type Model or similar instruments in the future, please contact. Previously Sold instruments may be found here. It has been sold, and is no longer available. This Vega C56 guitar is in overall good condition and plays well, currently set to a fairly low action height.Status: Pricing and hold status for all instruments currently available

vega guitars serial numbers

On this guitar, the tailpiece has been replaced with a German-made unit. Hardware on the Vega C56 is minimal as this is a purely acoustic guitar – the original celluloid pickguard, Grover Sta-Tite open gear tuners, and a trapeze style tailpiece. It appears to have had a neck reset, so the neck angle is good. The top shows some wear from enthusiastic strumming. The back has had a seam separation that seems stable. This was likely sourced from Brazil, as was the case with much rosewood at the time. The sides and back of the Vega C56 are lightly figured Maple, while the neck is Mahogany with a figured Rosewood fingerboard. Adirondack Spruce is somewhat stiffer than Sitka and holds up better when played hard, as might happen in a band with horns and banjos. Since that time, Sitka Spruce has been the wood of choice, though it has been reappearing as Adirondack forests recover. This wood was very commonly used for instrument tops until the US entered WW2 and requisitioned most of the wood stocks for aircraft production. The top is solid Spruce, likely Adirondack. The serial number is somewhat below other models known to have been produced in 1940, so there’s a possibility this example was built in 1939. Here we have a Vega C56 archtop in the natural finish introduced in 1940. Deering now owns the Vega name and produces excellent banjos bearing that name, but it was also been owned by Martin during the 1970’s. By the 1930s as banjos were waning, Vega began to focus on building guitars and many quality archtops were built. Vega is one of the older names in American musical instrument production, first operating in Boston, Massachusetts in 1881 and making guitars, mandolins, and horns. It was was Vega’s most popular full sized guitar and featured a solid Spruce top with Maple sides and back, Mahogany neck and Rosewood fingerboard. Built to compete with the Gibson L-7 and Epiphone Triumph, the Vega C56 Archtop was built from the 1930s until 1950.












Vega guitars serial numbers