Friday, 12 August 2011

Vintage 1960s Kent electric mandolin

guitarz.blogspot.com:
One of the things that we have to look out for on eBay is that sellers - especially those buying from estate sales, house clearances, etc - very often don't have the first clue about what they are selling. Take for instance this auction where the seller accurately tells us that this is a Kent model #744 because that is what it says on a sticker on the back of the headstock, but doesn't actually appreciate what that means and describes it as a "Kent short electric guitar".

Unfortunately the photos of the item in question give very little indication of scale, but to us at least, the 8 strings and rather compact body design should give away that this is in fact an electric mandolin. The Kent 744 is a Japanese mando, built in a factory near Tokyo, and in fact uses a longer than usual scale for a mandolin so that it is somewhere inbetween a mandolin and a mandola.

For more information please check this page at the excellent eMando.com website, where if you scroll down you'll also see a photo of Neve Campbell with a left-handed example of this Kent mando, giving a very nice indication of scale.

G L Wilson

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3 comments:

  1. I have that mandolin right here in my guitar shop. It is going under the knife tonight as a full restoration for a client of mine. Only now it doesn't have the tail cover and the bridge was changed at some point. It has all the same blems and marks and mismatched knobs.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have that mandolin right here in my guitar shop. It is going under the knife tonight as a full restoration for a client of mine. Only now it doesn't have the tail cover and the bridge was changed at some point. It has all the same blems and marks and mismatched knobs.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I want one. sab.464@hotmail.com if you have one for sale, hit me up

    ReplyDelete