Picked this up today for $15.50 at a local thrift store. They had no idea if the electronics worked. The nut holding the input jack was missing. Took a bit of effort because I could only get two screws loos from the pickguard. Got a nut on it. Works! The bridge pickup's output actually distorts my amp. Both pots will have to be replaced. Tone pot doesn't work at all. Volume is real scratchy. Frets are in great shape. Neck needs little adjusting. Tuners work perfectly. Very smooth. Missing the spring and trem arm. The bridge is the only thing I'd want to replace. Just a folded piece of metal with grooves in it. It has hight adjustment only. Hoping one of my 'tune-o-matics' will fit it. A bit dinged up. But all in all in great shape. Other than looking like it's been in a garage for the past 40 years.

The serial no. is '410'. Will have to find out if this means it's number 410. The tenth guitar from the fourth year they made them or it's number 41 of all the guitars they made. Japan has confusing serial numbers. 

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  • Finally got around to taking some measurements. This bridge is really narrow. Only 64MM from post to post. Or just about 2 1/2 inches. Way smaller than any adjustable bridge I've found so far. I'd have to re drill for new posts. The top loading hardtail is starting to sound like a better idea. It's also closer to the string spacing. Only off by a few MM. I would just need a really small sliver of wood between it and the body. Probably best to screw it down and not go floating. Getting rid of the wammy is not a problem. Wouldn't use it anyway.

  • My Global plays like a dream. Good jumbo frets. Well made and radiused fretboard. Truss rod. Really really bad bridge. Right now the pickups are really high so I can't lower the strings. There also looks to be a slight upward bend in the neck. Will have to wait till I drill out the pick guard, lower the pickups and get a better bridge. Then I'll tackle the light bend.

    Awesome look Anonymous. 

  • then there's the sacrilege  route  ;-)

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    • Ouch

      • yup  ,,  guilty as  charged  ,  back in my cannibal days  . lol 

        • Not as bad as some that I've seen over the years. I think we all do something like this in our younger days.

          Had a Chevy Nova when I was 16. It had a nice blue paint job on it, but I had to spray it primer gray because that was the in/cool thing of the day. That was dumb.

  • If your only going to play one note at a time then bad intonation with a slide is alright. As soon as you start playing cords or two note slides you'll notice it wont be in tune. Hope that guitar plays as awesome as it looks! Great save!

    Looking to find a tune-o-matic or abr1 bridge to fit the posts. Still have to drill out all the pick guard screws. I was able to get the jack back up threw the hole. But it's still really loose. 

    • Have you looked at Guitarfetish.com for a bridge?

  • I've got a similar, single pickup, Global. It was part of a lot of "restaurant fixtures" that were purchased at a storage unit auction. It had been stuck on the wall of a seaside bar for years. The electronics and tuners were ruined from salt air exposure. I replaced the tuners, pots and wiring. I tried to get the original pickup working again but it was too weak to be useful. I replaced it with a P90 inside the original chrome casing. I had to shave down the bobbin to get this to work.

    The bridge works OK for me since I mainly play open G slide on it so I haven't considered replacing it. The intonation isn't too far off on mine so maybe I'm lucky.

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