Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused). Picked up an old Kay LP copy - Guitar Discussions on The Fretboard
UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45

Picked up an old Kay LP copy

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So,i popped into a local auctionhouse yesterday and there was this old LP “effector”? copy by Kay up for auction, looking similar to the Gibson recording model, with built in effects.
whacked a £65 bid on and won it.
i had a real crappy kay electric from the catalogue in the mid 80’s (truly awful thing with some sort of a bigsby type thing on it that was so rough cast it scraped my hand when i used it).
Anyway, bar the low E tuning peg missing its all there and actually sounds quite decent on some settings - the effects - echo,tremelo,wah,whirlwind are crappy and all sound similar, but its got in and out of phase options and quite a cool sounding fuzz built in, quite a “punky” sound actually.
The only real issues i can see so far is the missing low E tuning peg and the stop tail bar looks to be at an awkward angle - leaning towards the bridge.
Anybody know much about these?
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Comments

  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    Made in Japan, 1970s. As you say the effects are a bit crap, but they have a trashy punky character that's quite cool in some ways.

    Can you post a pic of the machineheads? They used quite a few different types, but I'll almost certainly have a matching one.

    The stopbar post inserts may need epoxy'ing into the body - they're often not a tight fit.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

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  • Thanks ICBM, i’ll try work out how to post the images and pop some up
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  • Nice catch!

    Quelle surprise, I’ve had a few of these. :D

    If your expectations are low enough, it’s quite cool. They can be made to play reasonably well and the effects are…interesting, in a lo-fi way.

    In other words, any purchaser dropping £400 on one of these, buoyed up by eBay and Reverb hyperbole, fuelled with ‘Vintage Mojo’, ‘Lawsuit Era’ and all that shite would be sadly disappointed.




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  • suspiciousmindssuspiciousminds Frets: 369
    edited September 2023
    I agree, tbh, i wasnt expecting it to work at all but, it does, like you say in a very lofi way.
    https://imgur.com/a/csAc9Ze
    https://imgur.com/a/jdaOAFq
    https://imgur.com/a/Lroh3SY
    https://imgur.com/a/7v3r1Zg
    https://imgur.com/a/31aWtHP
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  • The leaning tailpiece studs are because the arched top of the guitar is steamed ply. There may well be an air gap between the ply and the blockboard beneath. This is too insubstantial to withstand string tension. There must be ways to remedy this but they may involve separating the ply from the blockboard, adding small wood blocks and, then, drilling into those.

    At the end of the day, the guitar will still be a Seventies plywood horror. Perhaps it would be good for slide?
    Be seeing you.
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  • The leaning tailpiece studs are because the arched top of the guitar is steamed ply. There may well be an air gap between the ply and the blockboard beneath. This is too insubstantial to withstand string tension. There must be ways to remedy this but they may involve separating the ply from the blockboard, adding small wood blocks and, then, drilling into those.

    At the end of the day, the guitar will still be a Seventies plywood horror. Perhaps it would be good for slide?
    Yes you are right.
    With a quick look i can see that the studs are actually slightly bent forward in the actual anchors - i’ll have a better look tomorrow.
    https://imgur.com/a/unW4HBt
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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426

    With a quick look i can see that the studs are actually slightly bent forward in the actual anchors
    Yes, the studs will be loose in the anchors as well, they’re just very poor quality threads.

    I may have some spare ones of those that fit better as well. You will probably still have to epoxy the anchors into the body though.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

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  • My Dad had one. I think he bought it from a catalogue. Even as a beginner, I could tell it was crap. I was lucky enough to be bought a Japan Squier Strat and even with its HDF body, crap tuners and weak pickups, it was miles better than the Kay. It was incredibly heavy I seem to remember, poorly made and the effects all sounded similarly poor and didn't really do what they describe (e.g. Echo was a slight variation of tremolo).

    I'm not sure the pickups were actually humbuckers, but I could be wrong.

    I wish you the best of luck with it!
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  • PennPenn Frets: 351
    Might not be a brilliant guitar but it does look cool. 
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  • I never noticed until now that they lacked a pickup selector switch. 
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  • guitars4youguitars4you Frets: 12794
    tFB Trader
    The guts for the effects on these LP's - Are they the same guts as per their pedals from the day - See below - I recall they are as simple as inside, with a 'rubber' base cover

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  • axisusaxisus Frets: 27656
    I remember hankering after one of those way back in the early 80s I guess. They had one on the wall in the local junk shop. Couldn't afford it.

    My first electric guitar was a Kay LP. I tortured it to death in the name of learning, one mod being trying to convert it to a double cut. I had no skills for anything back then!
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  • I never noticed until now that they lacked a pickup selector switch. 
    You’re right, there’s no selector switch, and underneath each pickup cover there’s what looks like a single coil with magnets packed around it to fill the cover..
    As i say, for 65 quid i’m not complaining, and even with only 5 strings on it, it sounds pretty good.

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  • guitars4youguitars4you Frets: 12794
    tFB Trader
    I never noticed until now that they lacked a pickup selector switch. 
    You’re right, there’s no selector switch, and underneath each pickup cover there’s what looks like a single coil with magnets packed around it to fill the cover..
    As i say, for 65 quid i’m not complaining, and even with only 5 strings on it, it sounds pretty good.

    More than enough strings for Keef
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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    suspiciousminds said:

    You’re right, there’s no selector switch, and underneath each pickup cover there’s what looks like a single coil with magnets packed around it to fill the cover.
    Yes, that's normal with this quality level of mid-70s Japanese Gibson copies - a very crude single coil with a u-shaped bent steel channel for the poles, with the 'polepiece' screws going into it through the cover. I fixed several of them back in the day by rebuilding the innards of both pickups into one casing, putting that in the neck position, and some form of hot humbucker, usually a secondhand DiMarzio Super Distortion, in the bridge.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

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  • If one or both of the output jack sockets were relocated to the customary position on the edge of the body, a short three-way toggle switch could be mounted in one of the vacant holes.
    Be seeing you.
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  • suspiciousmindssuspiciousminds Frets: 369
    edited September 2023
    If one or both of the output jack sockets were relocated to the customary position on the edge of the body, a short three-way toggle switch could be mounted in one of the vacant holes.
    I’ve looked at the wiring and decided to leave well alone…
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