Fender Stringmaster
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The Fender Stringmaster is a series of
console steel guitar The console steel guitar is any type of electric steel guitar that is built in a frame supported by legs. It may be a lap steel or a pedal steel. Console steel guitars are typically heavier instruments that have multiple necks and/or more than six ...
s produced by Fender from 1953 to 1980. Models were available with two, three and four necks, each neck with eight strings. The four neck version, known as the ''quad'' or Q-8, was discontinued in 1968.


Electrics

The 1953 MkI models had twin pickups that had stamped Chrome covers with no blend control. The pickups were blended via the tone control; Full off being Bridge Pickup and as the tone control was advanced the Neck pickup was progressively activated. Later the MkII had two single-coil pickups on each neck with black plastic covers, the blend achieved by a small wheel attached to a pot that sat just behind the bridge, introduced in 1954. The bridge pick-up was always on, and the neck pickup could be fed in to taste using the blend pot. Because the pickups were wired with reversed polarities, blending in the neck pickup caused the pickup configuration to be "hum-bucking". Basically the pickup design was a Humbucker split in half and mounted as two interconnected units. A neck selector switch controlled which neck's pickups were 'live'. On earlier 1950s models, the neck selector was controlled originally by slide switches and later by push-buttons. A single tone and a single volume control served the entire instrument.


Scale lengths

The original 1953 models had a long scale length, at 26" (33 frets). From 1954 the scale length was reduced, and two shorter lengths were available, 24.5" (31 frets) and 22.5" (29 frets). To determine the guitar's scale count the markers past the 24th fret; there are 2, 3, and 4 markers for the 22.5", 24.5", and 26" guitars respectively.


Fender Deluxe 6/8

A single neck version was also available, called the ''"Fender Deluxe 6" or "Fender Deluxe 8"'', in both six and eight string versions respectively. NOTE: An earlier single neck guitar with a trapezoid shaped pickup was called the "Fender Deluxe" but it is not a Stringmaster guitar. These guitars are not Stringmasters but use a very similar neck design neck and the same electronics configuration and are often categorized with them. All models of Stringmaster and Deluxe were simply called '' steel guitars'' in Fender publications; since the domination of pedal steel guitar non-pedal guitars like the Stringmaster are often referred to as console steel guitars or lap steel guitars. The name ''Fender Deluxe'' was a common Fender model name, also used for an unrelated series of Fender combo amplifiers produced from the 1940s to the present day, see
Fender Deluxe Reverb The Fender Deluxe Reverb is a guitar amplifier made by the Fender Electric Instrument Company and its successors. It was first introduced in 1963 by incorporating an onboard spring reverb tank to the newly redesigned Fender Deluxe amplifier. Spe ...
.


External links


Extract
from p. 32 of the 1972 Fender guitar and bass catalogue, describing the Stringmaster twin and triple neck models then available. Stringmaster Continuous pitch instruments 1953 introductions Musical instruments invented in the 1950s {{guitar-stub