chupacerveza
Member
Hello All,
I live in Austin, TX and recently traded a 1961 Gibson classical guitar for what I thought at first was a Mark IIB. Now I'm pretty sure this is a very early Mark I, serial number A328. I've posted several pictures on flickr here:
http://flic.kr/s/aHsjwMCXvr
Seems to me that it had the 100W and Graphic EQ options, possibly from the factory with the Fender speaker, but waiting on verification from Mesa (any help identifying this speaker model is appreciated regardless of whether it was installed at the factory), and I note that the 100/60 switch is on the front while the EQ switch is on the back. Of additional interest to me is that there are only two speaker outputs instead of three, would these both be 4 Ohms, I wonder?
I don't believe there are any other jacks for FX, etc.
Would this have been made in 1972? 73 maybe?
Thanks for any ideas or comments about finding out more about my new baby!
--Robert
I live in Austin, TX and recently traded a 1961 Gibson classical guitar for what I thought at first was a Mark IIB. Now I'm pretty sure this is a very early Mark I, serial number A328. I've posted several pictures on flickr here:
http://flic.kr/s/aHsjwMCXvr
Seems to me that it had the 100W and Graphic EQ options, possibly from the factory with the Fender speaker, but waiting on verification from Mesa (any help identifying this speaker model is appreciated regardless of whether it was installed at the factory), and I note that the 100/60 switch is on the front while the EQ switch is on the back. Of additional interest to me is that there are only two speaker outputs instead of three, would these both be 4 Ohms, I wonder?
I don't believe there are any other jacks for FX, etc.
Would this have been made in 1972? 73 maybe?
Thanks for any ideas or comments about finding out more about my new baby!
--Robert