T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
49.1 | Excellent action and sustain, not much in tone variety | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Sep 17 1986 13:35 | 12 |
| Never owned one myself, but a friend of mine had one for a long
time and I played it several times.
The thing that struck me about the guitar more than anything was
it had the lowest action of anything I had played at the time and
had a very solid feel. I do remember that it had GREAT sustain
but (not surprisingly) it also weighed a ton.
I kind of felt that it wasn't very interesting tonally though.
It didn't have a very wide variety of sounds.
db
|
49.2 | I love'em | PYONS::JENSEN | | Thu Nov 20 1986 18:49 | 17 |
| Hamer is an American company located in Arlington Heights (suburb
of Chicago) Ill. I have a custom built one that is similar to the
production Phantom A5 model. Actually I have had two, the first one
was stolen so I had Hamer build me another (very consistent).
They are incredibly playable - Low action, great sustain,
and very forgiving. The PA5 is one of the easiest guitars to play
high-neck (above 15th fret) leads I've ever used.
re: .1 ... The PA5 has three pickups: 1 rhythm (single coil), 2
leads (1 sc 1 humbucking). With these, I've been able to get most
sounds that I want. Although, I'll admit the PA5 is at its best
when the humbucking is selected and your favorite r-n-r amp is set
for blast-off. If your ever in Colorado Springs, stop by my house
for a demo.
steve
|
49.3 | new reply to an old topic | IMGAWN::MOREAU | | Thu Oct 22 1987 12:26 | 10 |
| I own a hamer guitar, don't know the model name though. It is a
double cutaway, has a curly maple top, a kahler system (retrofitted)
an old gibson humbucker (bridge position) and, oh yea, its red.
This guitar is a screamer for rock stuff! Dave is right about tonal
quality though. The other thing about this guitar is it has a very
narrow neck. I have very big hands so I don't use this guitar if
I'm playing stuff with alot of open chord position.
|
49.4 | HAMER REPLY | ELMAGO::MMCCULLOUGH | | Thu Mar 12 1992 11:23 | 10 |
| I'VE OWNED A HAMER GUITAR. IT WAS A HAMER PHANTOM. THIS GUITAR
WAS THE ONLY GUITAR THAT STRUCK ME AS HAVING A TONE MORE FULL THAN THAT
OF A LES PAUL. THE TREMOLO SYSTEM, HOWEVER, WAS NOT WORTH ANYTHING AS
IT WOULD NOT STAY IN TUNE WHEN USING THE ARM TO ANY DEGREE. THIS WOULD
HAVE BEEN SOLVED BY INSTALLING A LOCK NUT SYSTEM UP TOP, BUT SOLD IT
BEFORE I THOUGHT TO DO THIS. THESE GUITARS, ARE US MADE AS FAR AS I
KNOW, AND ARE HAND MADE. THIS WAS 1984. THE NEW HAMERS THAT I HAVE
SEEN HAVE KHALER OR FLOYD ROSE TYPE SET UPS. GOOD GUITARS. EXPENSIVE.
MATT MCCULLOUGH/ALBUQUERQUE,NM,USA
|
49.5 | Hamer makes *nice* stuff! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Thu Mar 12 1992 16:00 | 24 |
| I played a Hamer Steve Stevens model awhile back (before I got into
Gibsons) and I have to say it was an extremely pleasant guitar to play.
It had a single coil in the neck position, a humbucker in the bridge
position, and a Floyd and the variety of tones it would make was
remarkable.
It had a real nice low action and a great feeling ebony fretboard. My
only problems with it were that I was only playing 25.5 in. scale
instruments at the time and it's 24.75 in scale length felt a little
odd to me, and it was painted this strange copper color (like a penny)
and looked strange.
I could have gotten a great deal on it too, I just kick myself now for
not buying it! Live and learn. If I come across another one like that
I'll snatch it in a heartbeat (...and I wouldn't say that about very
many guitars right now, I'm about played out on the instrument side of
GTS).
On the other hand, I didn't really care for the neck on the Phantom III
that I played. It was a little too thick for my tastes. I played one
of their Strat shaped ones (Californian?) and thought it was nice, but
a little pricy. But I guess they all are when you buy new...
Greg
|
49.6 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | multiple sarcasm | Fri Mar 13 1992 07:35 | 5 |
| Hamer built their reputation in the 70's on some very nice Gibson
near-clones. One of the coolest of these imo are the flame top
Explorer copies. *If* you can find one, they go for about $500
used these days, a steal. I think Rick Neilsen may have bought
up a sizable chunk of them, though.
|
49.7 | Hamer time | KAOFS::C_CONNOLLY | | Tue Apr 21 1992 16:26 | 18 |
| Has anyone had any experience playing/owning/hearing any of the Hamer
guitars, especially the model called the "Sunburst Archtop" ? (I think;
it's usually featured on the inside back cover of Guitar Player).
I am familiar with their use by Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick, and the
late (and great) James Honeyman-Scott of the Pretenders (phase one),
but have not had the experience of hearing them in a more intimate
setting (i.e. smaller than an arena).
Any idea on prices, availability, playability/tone would be helpful.
(especially from north of the 49th parallel fellow Canucks)
I didn't check (oops) so feel free to point me in the right direction
if I've bypassed what I'm looking for.
Cal C.
|
49.8 | Nice stuff! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Tue Apr 21 1992 17:34 | 12 |
| I used to have a Hamer Scarab (weird shaped thing) that played really
nice. My only complaint with it was that it had a Kahler (and a 24.75"
scale, which I wasn't into when I had it). My experience with them
would say they make a very fine product.
I remember one really cool double cutaway sorta green sunburst that I
played many years ago too, such a cool guitar! Wish I'd bought it!
I'm also still kicking myself for not picking up the Steve Stevens
model I had a chance at a couple of years ago. A wonderful guitar!
Greg
|
49.9 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | No coasters in hell! | Tue Apr 21 1992 19:36 | 4 |
| A friend of mine is a Hamer "sunburst" freak. While he has had the
headstocks on ALL his Hamers snap off in dropped guitar accidents
(the one piece mahongany neck just doesn't hold up, I guess), they
have a great sound, and a fast neck.
|
49.10 | GTS prevention | EZ2GET::STEWART | the leper with the most fingers | Wed Apr 22 1992 09:08 | 8 |
|
I already threw mine away, but I thought I saw a Hamer blow-out in the
latest Guitar Center flyer. Can anyone confirm/deny this
hallucination?
|
49.11 | Ever hear of strap locks? | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Apr 22 1992 10:47 | 5 |
| Man, that guy must drop his guitars a lot. I've been playing for a lot
of years and have never had one hit the floor! (close, real close a
couple of times)
Greg
|
49.12 | re .10, possibly a Kramer blowout? | MVSUPP::SYSTEM | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Wed Apr 22 1992 11:07 | 0 |
49.13 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | No coasters in hell! | Wed Apr 22 1992 11:11 | 16 |
| >Man, that guy must drop his guitars a lot.
No, read = Roadies who drop HIS guitars a lot! He has 4 sunbursts. A
red one, a cherry sunburst, a dark sunburst, and a blue one. The Red
and Cherry ones were dropped by his roadie at sound checks. The dark
one was kicked off the guitar stand by a roadie from another band, and
I forget the scenario with the blue one. Anywho, in all cases, the
headstocks snapped off at the nut joint. All were glued back one, and
have worked ok since, but I just remember that those one peice
mahongany necks (which are real nice...small, and fast!) didn't take a
lot of pressure. Maybe it was all a fluke they all broke in the same
place, but I doubt it.
Just like those Kramer Baretta guitars that all the necks snapped in
two. Coincidence? Doubtful.
|
49.14 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Wed Apr 22 1992 11:27 | 1 |
| I snapped a Kramer neck once... Notorious.
|
49.15 | | RICKS::ROST | The Creator has a master plan | Wed Apr 22 1992 11:52 | 8 |
| Re: snapped necks
If I had a nickel for every Gibson I've seen with a cracked
headstock...Explorers and Firebirds with their skinny necks and
extended headstocks are the worst, and since Hamer Sunbursts took their
cue from the Explorer, no big surprise.
Brian
|
49.16 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Apr 22 1992 11:55 | 6 |
| Just about anything will break if you drop it the right way (or wrong
way, as the case may be).
I'd say it's about time for your friend to get a new roadie...
Greg
|
49.17 | I'll take a dozen | RICKS::CALCAGNI | almost out of powdered toast! | Wed Apr 22 1992 13:24 | 19 |
| When we say Hamer Sunburst here, we're talking about the cool little
numbers that vaguely resemble an old double cutaway LP Junior right?
I thought the Hamer Explorers were called just that, Explorers.
Anyway, like a lot of cool used gear, I have something to say about
these. They're great, one of the underappreciated treasures on the
used market. Fast necks, good wood, nice pickups, and many have
very flamey tops, which is a neat little plus. I let a great one of
these get away last year, a terrific player in very good condition;
Daddy's couldn't move it at $250, so they marked it down to about $200!
Yow! (oh well, as Fred A says, "you can't buy everything").
What puzzles me though is Hamer has just "re-issued" the Sunburst, at a
very hefty price tag; I think they list in the high teens. But you can
buy virtually the same guitar used for a fraction of that. I literally
saw a dealer with two of these, side by side; a re-issue Sunburst for
$1400, and a used one for $400. Guess which one I would buy :-)
/rick
|
49.18 | | RICKS::ROST | The Creator has a master plan | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:04 | 13 |
| Re: .17
Oops, you're right. The Explorer was the Standard, the LP Jr. types
were the Sunburst and the Special.
Prices:
Around 1981, Standards listed at about $1200, Sunbursts about $1000 and
Specials about $600. With inflation, I can see a Sunburst listing in
the $1500-1800 range.
Brian
|
49.19 | | SANDY::FRASER | Err on a G String | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:45 | 9 |
|
I've got a copy of the last Daddy's used gear flyer, and there
are four Hamers listed there:
Sunburst HD2 VG $399 HAM0761
Red Metallic HD2 VG $499 HAM1021
Sunburst HD1 VG $299 HAM11181
Phntm A5 Blu HD2 VG $349 HAM8611
|
49.20 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:51 | 11 |
| Hamer's have never seemed to hold their prices well. The Steve Stevens
model I was talking about before listed for like $1800 and this used
one in mint condition (albit an ugly color) sold for around $400. I've
seen a lot of used Hamers in the $200-$300 range.
I bought the Scarab I used to have for $75, from a music store, no
less! It played great, had a cool pickup in it, but was a little beat
up cosmetically and needed a good setup. What a deal! I got $225 in
trade on it when I traded it off a couple of years later... ;^)
Greg
|
49.21 | Buyer's Market | RICKS::ROST | The Creator has a master plan | Wed Apr 22 1992 15:15 | 6 |
| I don't know what the deal is with this deflation of Hamer and Dean
guitar prices, but a $300 sunburst is a great deal for a Les Paul fan
on a budget! Sheesh, that's only a few bucks more than buying a Korean
Strat brand new!
Brian
|
49.22 | Old Deans -- ultimate R&R weapon | CAVLRY::BUCK | No coasters in hell! | Wed Apr 22 1992 15:19 | 5 |
| -1
Wrong note, but Dean made a BAD @$$ guitar in 1979!!! Those pups go
for dirt now (and the specially wound dimarzios in them are second to
none as far as rock pickups go!!!).
|
49.23 | full metal Deans | RICKS::CALCAGNI | almost out of powdered toast! | Wed Apr 22 1992 15:27 | 7 |
| yeah, a lot of similarity between those old Deans and Hamers. Both
companies had a similar philosophy; high quality Gibson near copies.
There was an early '80's Dean Explorer in Daddy's a few weeks ago for
$179!!! Insane.
/rick
|
49.24 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Wed Apr 22 1992 15:35 | 5 |
| Was it a real one with the Fugly V headstock or the Japanese versions?
The orignals (hand made, USA only, way-bad-motorfinger, neck thru, pickups
from hell) were rippin' guits!
jc (who likes Hamers too !)
|
49.25 | | FRETZ::HEISER | electric warrior, acoustic saint | Wed Apr 22 1992 16:28 | 4 |
| doesn't Hamer make that 12-string bass used by Doug Pinnick of King's
X?
Mike
|
49.26 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | almost out of powdered toast! | Thu Apr 23 1992 09:28 | 7 |
| re coop
the $179 Dean was one of the real ones, fugly headstock and all
re Mike
yeah, Pinnick plays Hamers
|
49.27 | "New" Hamer Special | RICKS::ROST | Evil twin of Billy Ray Cyrus | Thu Jul 30 1992 15:27 | 8 |
| Saw an ad in one of the rags showing the "new" Hamer Special. The ones
from the early 80s were a lot like like LP Jrs. but used DiMarzio
humbuckers and had nicer finishes. The new ones have soapbar single
coils (P90 lookalikes) and the ho-hum finishes of a real LP Jr., even
more of a clone than before. The ad pitches it as a blues guitar,
leaning up against a worn tweed amp.
Jaco Costello
|
49.28 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wish I was ocean size | Thu Jul 30 1992 15:49 | 4 |
| Yeah, I've seen that ad too. Looked like a pretty cool guitar! Any
idea how much they sell for?
Greg
|
49.29 | Hamer-itus | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon Aug 31 1992 14:14 | 23 |
| I'd like to respond to this note which is in the general
discussion topic, but thought it would be best discussed here.
> Here's an idea if you want to check it; find a music store that
> deals both Fender and Hamer, take one of those new Hamer Specials
> (great copy of a '58 LP Special) and crank it through a '65 re-issue
> Twin. See how long it takes before they throw you out :-)
Lately, the Hamer ads in GP and GW have been catching my eye,
especially the Specials and Sunburst models. I played a Sunburst in
a music store a few weeks ago and loved it (but the $2100 list price
was a bit of a shock).
There is a "1981 Hamer Special" listed in last weeks Want
Advertiser. According to the ad, it is blonde with a curly maple top,
and humbuckers ?? I have to wonder if this is the same model that
Hamer is selling as a Special these days. If anyone is interested,
The guy is only asking $175.00 for it, including a case. If you want
the phone number, send me mail. I'm tempted to grab it myself, but
I've already got too many irons in the fire.
Mark
|
49.30 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | All over but the shouting | Mon Aug 31 1992 14:43 | 9 |
| I played one of those years ago (around '84). Great guitar, wish I'd
bought it. It was like a green sunburst, really the sort of thing I
could get off on playing today, but at the time I wasn't into it. As I
recall it was fairly inexpensive (used).
I'd love to nab a nice Hamer, but alas, it's in New England and I'm
broke.
Greg
|
49.31 | Bringing it back to life! | STORK::CURRY | | Thu Apr 21 1994 13:17 | 15 |
| It's been almost 2 years since someone has replied to this note, but
here goes;
Has anyone got an opinion on the Hamer "Slammer" series guitars? I
believe that these are the low-end Hamer models and are built in
Korea instead of here in the US. I own the "Slammer California" model
and am very pleased with it. The one thing that will get changed in
the not-to-distant future is the pickups! It is equipped with a single
coil at the neck and a humbucker at the bridge. Both of these sound
terrible in my opinion.
Other than the pickups, I'm very pleased with the look, fit
and feel of this ax. It plays well and has the thinest neck that I've
seen on any guitar! Very fast!
Mike
|
49.32 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu Apr 21 1994 14:37 | 4 |
| > It plays well and has the thinest neck that I've seen on any guitar
Clearly this man has never played a current line Ibanez...
|
49.33 | What's an Ibanez? | STORK::CURRY | | Thu Apr 21 1994 15:29 | 7 |
| > Clearly this man has never played a current line Ibanez...
OK, Greg!! What did I tell you about the "I" word!!! Seriously though,
Ibanez makes a great guitar, just not for me......
Mike
|
49.34 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Thu Apr 21 1994 15:54 | 4 |
| You saying the neck on the Hamer is really thinner then an Ibanez RG
series guitar? That's hard to believe!
Greg
|
49.35 | | SOLVIT::SNORAT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Fri Apr 22 1994 09:04 | 12 |
|
While talking to a bud, he told me about a Hamer he came across
that was so... <word?> strange, it was cool. This Hamer had an
aluminum neck. Can anyone say anything more about this? Sounds
weird.
Jus' curious.
-Rick.
|
49.36 | sounds like the Johnny Bench model | EZ2GET::STEWART | Fight fire with marshmallows | Fri Apr 22 1994 09:54 | 1 |
|
|
49.37 | Weird, yes. Bad, YES! | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Fri Apr 22 1994 10:19 | 17 |
| > While talking to a bud, he told me about a Hamer he came across
> that was so... <word?> strange, it was cool. This Hamer had an
> aluminum neck. Can anyone say anything more about this? Sounds
> weird.
Probably Kramer... They made an aluminum necked model for awhile. It
had a rosewood fretboard. Abysimally heavy, and wouldn't hang on a
strap for beans (well, it'd hang there, neck pointing straight down).
Had a nifty zero fret (that always seemed to be scarred up so that it'd
bind the strings) sitting in front of this strange aluminum thing that
functioned more to grab and bind the strings then as a nut. I've seen
two or three of 'em, and knew a guy that actually owned one, what a
hunk of junk. I wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole.
I've never heard of a Hamer guitar with a non-wood neck.
Greg
|
49.38 | | SOLVIT::SNORAT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Fri Apr 22 1994 11:51 | 9 |
|
Yeah, Kramer. Dat's it. Thanks for the info. I haven't seen
one. The question popped into my mind when I saw "Hamer", and I
was wrong at that. Thanks.
It's been filed in the Things_To_Avoid area.
Rick
|
49.39 | | LEDS::BURATI | cluck? | Fri Apr 22 1994 12:01 | 2 |
| There was another guitar maker back in the 70s and 80s that used
(unfinished) aluminum for necks. Travis Bean?
|
49.40 | cold cold cold | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Fri Apr 22 1994 12:05 | 9 |
| You got it. I think Travis was first, Kramer was an employee who left
to do his own version. Kramer's main innovation was putting wood
inserts along the back of the neck to give it a warmer feel to the
touch.
I think Messenger was also a metal neck guit; they were a short lived
San Francisco based company and the weapon of choice for Mark Farner!
/don_and_mel
|
49.41 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Aren't you glad I asked? | Fri Apr 22 1994 12:32 | 6 |
| Yeah, I meant to mention that. The Travis Bean's were almost as bad as
the Kramers... I didn't look at the nut/zero fret region the one time
I saw one, but the thing was horrendously neck heavy, heavy overall
too. A real back breaker, yech.
Greg
|
49.42 | Some trivia | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Fri Apr 22 1994 13:44 | 14 |
| The worst aspect of the Kramer's aluminum neck was that people got
careless about storing the guitars. Experienced musicians usually take
great care to store their delicate instruments under conditions of
controlled temperature and humidity, but with the Kramers, no such care
was necessary, as the metal neck was quite impervious to harsh
conditions. Some folks apparently got in the habit of leaving the
guitars on cold back porches, and then experienced the horror of
"tongue freeze" when trying to play Hendrix licks (so to speak) with
their lips. Naturally, litigation frequently ensued (so to speak) and
the Kramer, as they say, is history.
Is it Friday yet? %^)
Dave
|
49.43 | scuse me while I kiss this neck | RICKS::CALCAGNI | I Got You Babe (Slight Return) | Fri Apr 22 1994 13:53 | 2 |
| Pah-bah hahze rhanan thra ma brahn...
|
49.44 | | LEDS::BURATI | cluck? | Fri Apr 22 1994 14:46 | 1 |
| Hmmmm, some of you guys need a weekend away from this place. :^)
|
49.45 | How right you are | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Good rhythms to bad rubbish | Fri Apr 22 1994 16:03 | 5 |
| > Hmmmm, some of you guys need a weekend away from this place. :^)
And today is Friday! To quote a friend, "Coincidence? I think not!"
Dave
|
49.46 | | BIGFAB::I_GOLDIE | resident alien | Thu Jan 26 1995 18:45 | 14 |
| awaking a note..!
Tonight I tried a 2nd hand Hamer Californian at a store at Marlboro and
found it to be an excellant guitar....the bad part was the 2nd hand
price $799.According to the owner of the store,they list at something
like $1800 and the guy who bought it for that price just didn't like it
and wanted rid of it.It had more than its fair share of dinks and even
some paint on the head ad was certainly not worth the asking price.
....nice guitar,though!
ian
|
49.47 | the Ultimate | DABEAN::REAUME | my 2 vices - GTS and coasters | Thu Mar 09 1995 18:25 | 23 |
|
Duck! ...here come the GTS bullets!
(Oh, what the heck. Judging from Coop and Buck's recent entries
I'm not the only one!)
NEW 2 ME : HAMER STUDIO - Cherry Sunburst, flame maple, double
cutaway, double humbucker, kick-butt guitar! This guitar is not
flashy, other than the gold hardware and awesome tiger stripe
flame maple arched top. The looks attracted me, playing without an amp
made me really interested, and plugging it into a decent amp made me
a believer! Isn't that the way it should be.
The neck is about as wide as a Les Paul, but not as deep. It is a
glued in neck as well. The neck pickup is nice and bluesy, the bridge
is pretty much similar to the LP. I'd been looking at the guitar
awhile and then decided that I would sell my BC Rich outright to take
on my first new guitar in quite some time (four/five years).
(end of GTS confession)
-John R-
|
49.48 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | WHAT a DUMP! | Thu Mar 09 1995 19:21 | 4 |
| John,
Nice axe -- just don't drop it -- the necks have a real tendency to
snap on thosesuckers (but they ARE great guitars)
|
49.49 | | BIGQ::DCLARK | The Last Temptation of Raffi | Fri Mar 10 1995 08:05 | 3 |
| Kurlan's in Worcester has some drop-dead gorgeous Hamer custom
shop guitars in the store. Highly flamed tops, sorta PRS body
shapes. Awesome instruments!
|
49.50 | | DABEAN::REAUME | my 2 vices - GTS and coasters | Fri Mar 10 1995 08:40 | 13 |
|
My new Hamer has the double cutaway similar to their standard which
is kinda based on the old double cutaway Les Paul. The archtop does
remind me more of the PRS type or sculpting than the LP style. If
you've seen the ad with Jeff Golub for Hamer, that's the axe.
It is a glued on neck and they claim to have more surface area
contact in the joint than LP's. It does come with a lifetime warranty,
but I hope I don't need it!
It has a great balance to the body and seems to be very capable of
LP tones with considerable less weight. I've got a few hours of playing
time in so far, with much more to come!
-John R-
|
49.51 | | FREEBE::REAUME | my 2 vices - GTS and coasters | Tue Mar 21 1995 19:08 | 13 |
|
Well, I gigged out with the new Hamer last weekend and used it for all
three sets. I guess that says it all because I had the Les Paul ready
to roll, but the Hamer worked out just fine. The axe is VERY Les
Paulish and doesn't penalize your shoulder as much at the end of the
evening. I guess it's a keeper.
The action was set really low at the store (trying to entice buyers I
assume), I had to raise the bass side slightly for my liking. I went
back through some recent Guitar mags and only now I realize that they
have been raving on this guitar since it came out! GP - Nov '94 has a
decent review, and the issue with 100 best buys has the Hamer Archtop
Studio as #1!!! Not bad credentials!
|