1930s Kay Kraft Style A 2-Point Archtop Guitar
Overview: Strangely-enough, our shop works on a lot of Kay Kraft instruments of all stripes. This Style A is of the type I see most often -- a 14-fretter with the "adjustable heel" gizmo, classic 2-point shape, and all-ply construction in the body. These guitars are built light and have a long scale length and snappy, aggressive tone so they work extremely well for both country-blues fingerpickers (their main audience) or as gypsy-jazz boxes where their percussive, up-front sound lends itself to the style.
Tone: It's loud, punchy, snappy, and aggressive. These work best when "dug-into" a bit.
Feel: The nut is on the wide side and has a medium-heft neck depth so it's not a feel for everyone. Unlike some of the earlier Kay Kraft necks, though, this one does not have the giant V profile and feels a lot faster. Its back is a C-shape with a hint of soft V to it.
Interesting features: Well, it has an "adjustable heel" gizmo at the neck joint and the neck itself is bolted to the body. When we work on these we "lock" the heel via shims and a second "keeper bolt" that's hidden internally under the big wingnut-tightened bolt. Then we fit an adjustable bridge as-normal for archtop guitars so minor action adjustments can be performed easily. This makes the instrument a lot more stable than if trying to use the adjustable setup "as normal" and is totally reversible.
Repairs included: The neck was "reset" at a good angle, it got a level/dress of the frets, a new rosewood adjustable bridge fit, cleaning, and setup work done.
- Weight: 3 lbs 15 oz
- Scale length: 25 3/4"
- Nut width: 1 7/8"
- Neck shape: medium C/D
- Board radius: 14"
- Body width: 14 1/4"
- Body depth: 3 3/8"
- Top wood: ply spruce
- Back & sides wood: ply maple
- Bracing type: ladder
- Bridge: rosewood adjustable (new)
- Fretboard: ebonized maple
- Neck wood: poplar
- Action height at 12th fret: 3/32” bass 1/16” treble (fast, spot-on)
- String gauges: 48w-10 extra lights
- Truss rod: non-adjustable steel
- Neck relief: straight
- Fret style: lower/smaller
Condition notes: It's actually in pretty dang good health for its age and type. There's weather-checking to the finish throughout and mild scuffs and scratches here and there. The bridge is a replacement but it's otherwise original throughout. There is a filled dryness crack that runs most of the length of the fretboard (it's stable, but a cosmetic defect). The heel cap has a hairline crack across its middle (like all of these do) but is stable. There's a little grunge on the fretboard and it appears that someone put a light coat of finish on the board at some point.
It comes with: Sorry, no case.
Consignor tag: MCH
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