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  2. Acoustic-electric guitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic-electric_guitar

    The first person to create the modern electric pickup for the acoustic guitar was Lloyd Loar, with his company Vivi-tone. [3] In the early 1930s, Loar split from Gibson and founded Vivitone, where he created an early electric pickup for the acoustic guitar. Electronics were mounted in a removable drawer that slid out of the bass rim of the ...

  3. Gibson Chet Atkins SST - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_Chet_Atkins_SST

    The SST was a design that combined Gibson's steel-string acoustic and electric guitar technology. [2] The guitar had a solid spruce or cedar top and a mahogany body. Unlike most acoustic-electrics, the SST had no resonating chamber or soundhole. The acoustic sound came from a bridge mounted transducer manufactured by L.R. Baggs for Gibson with ...

  4. Starcaster by Fender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starcaster_by_Fender

    A dreadnought acoustic guitar with laminated spruce top, available also as an acoustic/electric with built-in pickup and pre-amp and a third version adding built-in tuner, with 20 frets, 25.3" scale length, 1.69" width at nut, 2.24" width at heel and 3.94"–4.92" body depth. A 3/4 scale "Starcaster Colt" acoustic guitar.

  5. Gibson Super 400 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_Super_400

    It was first sold in 1934 and named for its $400 price (equivalent to $9,110 in 2023), [2] like many Gibson guitars of that era. The Super 400 features solid carved-wood construction, and at the time of its introduction was the largest guitar that the Gibson Guitar Corporation had produced. Until 1939, it had a hand-engraved tailpiece and a ...

  6. PRS Guitars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRS_Guitars

    PRS guitars feature three original bridge designs: a one-piece pre-intonated stoptail, a vibrato, and a wrapover tailpiece. The vibrato was designed with the help of guitar engineer John Mann. It was an update on the classic Fender vibrato and used cam-locking tuners, which offered wide pitch bending with exceptional tuning stability. [3]

  7. Trigger (guitar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trigger_(guitar)

    Trigger is a modified Martin N-20 nylon-string classical acoustic guitar used by country music singer-songwriter Willie Nelson. Early in his career, Nelson tested several guitars by different companies. After his Baldwin guitar was damaged in 1969, he purchased the Martin guitar, but retained the electrical components from the Baldwin guitar.