It's time for some more Guitar Cheese here at Guitarz! The seller seems to think that this little axe might be an Eko. Now, Italy's Eko guitars are known for some pretty funky designs, especially those of a certain vintage, but I've not seen one of these before. However, it does have "Made in Italy" on the back of the headstock (see the pics on the eBay page) so perhaps it was made by Eko. No other Italian guitar manufacturers spring to mind at the moment.From its diminuitive size, I'd say that it would appear to be a guitar for the junior player, and rather bizarrely the output looks like a 1/8th inch jack - a special lead being included in the auction.
I doubt it's a quality instrument, but it certainly looks to be a nice fun piece for the collector of cheesy guitars.
Edit: It IS an Eko, basically one sold as a child's toy together with a mini amp. See here.

Blimey! I think some eBay sellers are just plain bonkers! 
"The electronics though are horrible. Described as having two volumes and three tone controls, it actually has one volume and four tone controls. After removing the control cover plate and studying the wiring, both pickups are wired in parallel to the main volume control and the other four controls are wired as tone controls with the exact same spec capacitor. As you turn up each tone control you roll off more and more highs, until you are left with mud. [...]
"...it was delivered with a broken nut on the lap steel, and in severe need of a proper set-up on the 6 string. [...] This guitar ... is in desperate need of a luthier. [...] It arrived un-playable on either neck.
"Believe it or not, the guitar has no bridge* - the strings come straight off the bigsby, so there is no way to adjust height or intonation. I found that if I threaded the guitar strings under the retainer bar on the Bigsby (which is proper) the strings hit the fretboard. If I allowed the string to be above the retainer, then the 12th fret is no longer halfway between the nut and bridge, and intonation is off by a mile. This is a serious design flaw - the bigsby should have been placed further back towards the endpin so that there would be room for an adjustable bridge, which is the proper set up for a bigsby. (I'm not kidding - if you look at a photograph of one of these, you will plainly see that the guitar has no bridge).
More and more often on eBay these days I'm seeing guitars bearing the Tennessee brand. These guys don't play it safe with tried and trusted popular models. They seem to make up the most outlandish designs possible such as crazy multi-necked instruments (I've featured some of these before) and they always seem to be very cheap so as to appeal to the buyer who thinks "That guitar might well look crazy, but at that price I'll give it a whirl." It's an interesting marketing strategy.
I'd like to say a big Thank You to Joe Coffey and
This is the first in an occasional series of blog items, basically for when I'm experiencing a slow news day in the guitar world and for when I haven't found anything particularly alarming on eBay to show you.

Here's a rare Fender - in fact it's so rare that it's one of those models that doesn't officially exist!
There's a listing on eBay right now for a 


