These in this particular guitar are really nice. I have had many of these guitars and these older M22's sound different than the newer ones. Keissel started in the 1940's as a pickup and amp company so have been in the pickup side almost as long as Rick has. Longer than both Fender and Gibson have built pickups in fact. It was a pickup contract gone bad that forced the name change in I believe it was 1946 or 48 from Keissel to Carvin due to having to fold the company under the Keissel name then reorganize. The Carvin name was half on the 2 sons put together. It's also why they can build double cream buckers without paying the Dimarzio patent as they were building them many years before Dimarzio existed.
These are very sweet and warm in this particular guitar and will likely stay put. I pulled the SD out of the 17 Keissel however in favor of a Perpetual Burn because that one was very compressed and did not open up like I wanted it to with a volume roll off. These however are very nice and also very expressive.
Anybody hold the copyright on double dark chocolate?Carvin can make double cream M22s because they have 22 pole pieces instead of 12; it's the same reason that SD can make double cream P-Rails. The DiMarzio trademark only covers traditional humbucker bobbins with 6 poles per size. M22s have too many poles while P-Rail bobbins are a different size.
That is the thing with old guitars that just sat there for years- you can bet the electronics are worth replacing- the pots, if nothing else.
I have to say, that koa is beautiful. Carvin was using it a lot from the 80s-90s. Now they are into the burl and strange bevels if you look at their Facebook or Instagram. Many of those finishes look like a squirrel threw up on them. The older, unstained woods look a lot classier.
I have to say, that koa is beautiful. Carvin was using it a lot from the 80s-90s. Now they are into the burl and strange bevels if you look at their Facebook or Instagram. Many of those finishes look like a squirrel threw up on them. The older, unstained woods look a lot classier.
