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Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck

Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck
« on: March 08, 2015, 03:54:55 PM »
Hi All
I recently acquired the rather strange guitar shown in the attached photos. It was made as a likeness to the guitar (believed to be modified Burns Bison) featured on the cover of the John Mayall album “So Many Roads an Anthology 1964-1974”. It features some very 60s artwork on what appears to be an original Vox Neck. The neck is very dry, and any remaining frets were removed easily by hand. The neck was glued and screwed (not using the original holes!!) to the body. I have successfully removed it and the pitch of the original holes is 1.5 “ x 1.875” and Nut to first fret measures 1.46 which indicates a scale length of either 26” or 26.125”. The photos show a lightly stamped “P” near to the truss rod opening at the heel end of the neck. Would appreciate some help to identify if this an original Vox Neck? Happy to answer any questions you might have (if I can). More photos available if needed. Many thanks

jules

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Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck
« Reply #1 on: March 09, 2015, 03:58:09 PM »
Yes, looks like a genuine mid sixties UK Vox neck. I have a very similar neck myself - mine is dated Dec 64, and has the same tuning keys too - these (or at least very similar necks, including truss rod adjustment at the body rather than headstock) have been used on several mid-sixties Vox's

Does yours have a zero fret? Mine does, and distance between zero and 12th fret is 12 5/8" (so a scale of 25 1/4"). The hole spacings are the same as yours though. My frets are lifting too.

Vox didn't seem to stick rigorously to specific necks on specific guitars, and I've seen similar necks (but not measured precisely, so maybe not) on some Consort, New Escort, Phantom and Mark guitars, and even a Vox Ace - but they have probably been fitted on further models still

Early teardrop-headstocked necks are more pointy in shape, later examples are the same shape but have the metal truss rod cover. This is a good intermediate between the 2, corresponding with the late '64 date.

The open gear plate tuners suggest something other than a Phantom or Mark though...

Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck
« Reply #2 on: March 10, 2015, 01:57:38 PM »
Hi Jules
Thanks very much for the info. There is no zero fret on this neck. To aid identification further perhaps, I have removed the only 2 real pickups (2 of the 4 were fake !), and they are exactly like the single coil ones shown on the forum info pages, except that they are marked SP2 not SP1. They have a resistance of 6.4k. Any idea what the thread on the truss rod might be? think I will need to make an appropriate adjusting nut.

jules

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Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck
« Reply #3 on: March 10, 2015, 09:42:01 PM »
Any chance you can show a pic of the nut? Let me take some pics of my neck and get back to you

Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck
« Reply #4 on: March 16, 2015, 11:22:47 AM »
Hi, couple of pics attached. [ATTACH=CONFIG]3237[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]3236[/ATTACH]

jules

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Help needed to identify possible Vox Neck
« Reply #5 on: March 17, 2015, 12:30:33 PM »
here are a few pics of my similar neck - same tuning keys, and truss rod adjustment placement - but with zero fret



I don't know how to measure the thread, but the nut has a 3/8 inch dimater, and is 7/8 inch long - so I guess it would be imperial rather than metric

There is also a rather similar Phantom neck (maybe from '67) on ebay here
60s-VOX-PHANTOM-N-E-C-K-made-in-ENGLAND/

 

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