He begged his dad for one. Dad ended up buying it for him. Dime won the second one in a contest a short time later (not the same day). He was 16, and wanted a car, and decided to sell one of the guitars. He liked the contest guitar better, but didn't wanna bum his dad out, so he sold the contest one for $600. Years later, he saw it in a shop, after someone had painted the lightning bolts on it. Dime ordered a custom axe from the shop owner, who never got around to doing it, and eventually gave him the lightning bolt guitar (the DFH), and informed him that it was his original one.
Pretty much on target. Several other companies did build prototypes for Dime including BC Rich and Hamer but it was the Washburn USA shop that gave him the guitar he really asked for. Things fell apart after Grover left in relationship and also when Dean came back in business.Although I'm posting this nearly 8 years after the last post in this thread...
From an inside source, Dime came to Washburn for a few reasons not mentioned here. Yes, Dean was out of business. Yes, of course Washburn offered cash and gear (like every other manufacturer did). What set the Washburn offer apart from the others was this... At that time, Washburn's USA handmade guitar shop was run by one of the greatest living luthiers, Grover Jackson. Grover was EXTREMELY hands on when it came to how guitars in that shop were designed, the materials used, and the processes in which they were finished, assembled, and set-up. That impressed Dime, as it should have. Grover gave Washburn credibility it grossly needed, and the guitars that were coming out of that shop under Grover were top notch. Additionally, there was a young man working in the "custom" shop of that USA plant who was a friend of Dime's. I'm not saying they were best friends, but they knew each other, and I believe that young man had worked on some of Dime's guitars in the past, so Dime trusted him, too. Dime personally came to the USA shop a number of times and helped design his guitars with Grover and that dude. A lot of fantastic guitars came out of that little factory for a couple years.




Was Armadillo the company Elliott Rubenstein started? Elliott owned the Thoroughbred Music chain in Florida, I used to do a lot of business with them and in '96 Elliott told me he had acquired the Dean name and intellectual property, etc. He started a little shop in Florida making USA Deans, and as you say, good-quality imports. IIRC he hired Zelinsky back in '97, him having got over the nose candy issues that cost him the company in the first place (not to be hard on Dean, it happened to others too - Dennis Berardi and Kramer for one).
I don't know anything about Elliot Rubenstein or the nose candy rumors, and who knows if that was true. I think the rest sounds true as there's no indication that Dean Zelinsky is an owner of Dean today, just that he's working with them
Although I'm posting this nearly 8 years after the last post in this thread...
From an inside source, Dime came to Washburn for a few reasons not mentioned here. Yes, Dean was out of business. Yes, of course Washburn offered cash and gear (like every other manufacturer did). What set the Washburn offer apart from the others was this... At that time, Washburn's USA handmade guitar shop was run by one of the greatest living luthiers, Grover Jackson. Grover was EXTREMELY hands on when it came to how guitars in that shop were designed, the materials used, and the processes in which they were finished, assembled, and set-up. That impressed Dime, as it should have. Grover gave Washburn credibility it grossly needed, and the guitars that were coming out of that shop under Grover were top notch. Additionally, there was a young man working in the "custom" shop of that USA plant who was a friend of Dime's. I'm not saying they were best friends, but they knew each other, and I believe that young man had worked on some of Dime's guitars in the past, so Dime trusted him, too. Dime personally came to the USA shop a number of times and helped design his guitars with Grover and that dude. A lot of fantastic guitars came out of that little factory for a couple years.
I think Dean went out of buisness for a while?
Dime's first guitar when he was 16 was a Dean ML-.