Cimar Bass - Slight Rustoration

My mate Terry is a sculptor and hot rod builder. He had this beasty hanging in his factory as wall art.
He told me he wanted to learn to play bass,so I said I'd take the Cimar home and see if it could be revived. The only catch was - "DON'T TOUCH THE PATINA!!!" :nono:
I think it has spent part of its life floating in a creek,there was mud under the scratchplate! there was 1 screw holding each machinehead,the bridge pickup was missing and the other had a hole drilled through the side,and there was a massive crack in the back of the neck.
Anyway,I gave it a tweak,found an old Jap Fender pickup in the shed that fitted the original cover,repaired the neck and strung it up.
Happy to say it plays very nicely!

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There are heaps of hairline cracks through the headstock. I've sealed the worst.
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Here it is next to my later Cimar P Bass I restored about 10 years ago. You can see the earlier one uses a more accurate copy of a Jazz style body. The later one is based on a Blazer.
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Here are the early and late logos
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Cheers,PJ
 
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Re: Cimar Bass - Slight Rustoration

I am old enough to remember the later style logo decal when it was new.
 
Re: Cimar Bass - Slight Rustoration

So these were Ibanez Roadstar copies or did Ibanez copy their head?

From Wikipedia ...

"Cimar was a Hoshino Gakki guitar brand. Designs of Cimar guitars are sometimes very similar to Hoshino Gakki's Ibanez guitar brand. Cimar guitars appear in Hoshino Gakki catalogues. "

I've noticed, like several brands, that Cimar is never mentioned here, so I assume it may be one of the brands that never made it to the USA, but abounded here in Australia and quite possibly Asia.
 
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