1950s Kay K-95 Electric Mandolin
There weren't a ton of electric mandolins to choose from when this Kay was made back in the early '50s and I'm pretty sure this was the most affordable one you could find aside from slapping a DeArmond pickup on whatever mandolin you had around. Alternatives were Gibsons, Vegas, and Epiphones -- much pricier gear through and through.
This earlier version of their electric mando, with its "Thin Twin" blade-style single coil pickup, is definitely the one to have. The later, flat-box pickups just don't have the same sound quality to them -- they're a little, well... flat-sounding... whereas this is pretty dynamic and interesting.
It came to the shop in pretty decent shape, too, and only needed glorified setup work to make the most of it. Post-work it plays like a champ.
The body is ply throughout and, of course, press-arched to shape. Controls are mounted on a neat little sideplate and the jack, strangely-enough, is recessed at the endblock.
Repairs included: a fret level/dress, side dots install, cleaning, and setup.
Body wood: ply spruce over ply maple
Bridge: rosewood (replacement) adjustable
Fretboard: rosewood
Neck wood: maple or poplar
Pickups: 1x "Thin Twin" single coil
Action height at 12th fret: 1/16" overall (fast)
String gauges: feels like 36w-10 in nickel or stainless steel
Neck shape: medium C
Board radius: flat
Truss rod: non-adjustable
Neck relief: straight
Fret style: low/small
Scale length: 14"
Nut width: 1 1/8"
Body width: 10 1/4"
Body depth: 2 1/2"
Condition notes: it's missing its tailpiece cover and the bridge is non-original (but better than the original). The knobs are period Kay knobs but not the originals. There's usewear and mild scratching and finish wear throughout but overall it's in good shape. The neck shows evidence of plenty of loving years spent playing it. There are two non-original strap buttons installed.
It comes with: an original chip case.
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