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Author Topic:   Need a pic of a Fry Pan knob
Mike Neer
Member

From: NJ

posted 26 March 2004 08:03 AM     profile   send email     edit
Can someone snap a pic for me and send it to my email address? Thanks.
J D Sauser
Member

From: E-03700-DENIA (Costa Blanca), Spain

posted 26 March 2004 02:21 PM     profile   send email     edit
If you'd send me one, I'll make a picture of it for you in return

I need to search... I should even have a drawing with the exact dimension somewhere. The knobs are nowhere to be found.

... J-D.

Rick Aiello
Member

From: Berryville, VA USA

posted 26 March 2004 04:22 PM     profile   send email     edit
Mike, check your email.

If any you woodworkers want to make some ... I always thought a nice brown/black veiny wood (you can see I'm an expert ... ) would be cool.

The dimensions are ...

8 sides ... with a triangle pointer on one face ...

Each face is 3/8" from the apex of the knob.

Each face is 5/16" wide.

The height of one face is 5/16".

The height to the apex is 7/16"

The faces extend to the apex as trangular facets.

The triangular pointer is an equalateral triangle ... each side is 1/8" ... sits dead center to one face ...

Hole fits a solid shaft potentiometer.

If anybody decides to make up some ... count me in for a few

------------------

www.horseshoemagnets.com

Ray Montee
Member

From: Portland, OR, USA

posted 26 March 2004 09:23 PM     profile   send email     edit
One photo I have shows a knob identical to the early Bakelite, one knob models; 8 side knob with raised center point.
The knobs for 1934, 1940 and 1950 vary.
The 1934 knobs appears to be like the one mentioned above while the 1940's knob looks more like a Philco Radio knob; and, the 1950's model showing a knob that looks like the knobs on the PANDA Bakelite of that era.
Mike Neer
Member

From: NJ

posted 26 March 2004 09:42 PM     profile   send email     edit
Found this in an old tackle box under my workbench:

Came from an old Epiphone Model M

[This message was edited by Mike Neer on 26 March 2004 at 09:43 PM.]

Ray Montee
Member

From: Portland, OR, USA

posted 27 March 2004 05:41 AM     profile   send email     edit
That's the one! Drawn on the original Fry Pan patent......no less.
Jon Light
Member

From: Brooklyn, NY

posted 27 March 2004 06:19 AM     profile   send email     edit
My file labelling habits suck and I don't know if this is a Rick, an Excel, or a ShoBud.

J D Sauser
Member

From: E-03700-DENIA (Costa Blanca), Spain

posted 27 March 2004 07:18 AM     profile   send email     edit
It's a Rick, Jon... just the knobs aren't.
Mike Neer's picture depicts the correct knob, also found on early B models with volume control only. I have never seen these used one volume and tone control models, they featured the later "flying saucer"-type knobs.
IF anybody has one of these knobs, I'd be a buyer, BTW.
I think that we ought to be able to reproduce these too.
I have never found a replacement offered by NOS suppliers for radio and/or amp antique dealers.

... J-D.

Rick Aiello
Member

From: Berryville, VA USA

posted 27 March 2004 10:12 AM     profile   send email     edit

Here's one on a Supro "Poor Man's Frypan"

Like tuning machines (metal butterbean, white plastic, 3 on a strip, loners) ... Rickenbacher used whatever was around at the time.

These octagonals were widely available in the early to mid '30s. They are found on many of Rickenbacher's "competitors" ...

I found a slightly larger octagonal somewhere ... have it on frypan alongside its little brother (as a tone).

Octagonal knobs, "arrow/pointer" knobs, flying saucer knobs... these changes were certainly driven by mass availability.

------------------

www.horseshoemagnets.com

Kerry Wood
Member

From: Tucson, Arizona, USA

posted 27 March 2004 04:12 PM     profile   send email     edit
These are up on ebay right now. You've got one day left. I'm not going to post the auction because it's still live - but I'm sure you can find them.

Kerry



[This message was edited by Kerry Wood on 27 March 2004 at 04:15 PM.]

J D Sauser
Member

From: E-03700-DENIA (Costa Blanca), Spain

posted 28 March 2004 04:02 AM     profile   send email     edit
Thanks Kerry, but athough similar, these are not the ones Rickenbacher used. They should beveled surfaces should be flat.

... J-D.

Robert Corwin
Member

From: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

posted 28 March 2004 06:50 PM     profile   send email     edit
>>Octagonal knobs, "arrow/pointer" knobs, flying saucer knobs... these changes were certainly driven by mass availability.

Rick, I have a chrome plate B with the usual 1 1/8" arrow/pointer tone knob but a larger 1 1/2" arrow/pointer volume knob. Have you seen this combination before?

Rick Aiello
Member

From: Berryville, VA USA

posted 29 March 2004 05:05 AM     profile   send email     edit
I have 3 "arrow knob" B6s (one under serious repair right now) ...

All are 1 1/8" at the base ... on opposite plates.

------------------

www.horseshoemagnets.com

Mike Harmon
Member

From: Overland, Missouri, USA

posted 06 April 2004 06:12 PM     profile   send email     edit
If you have a copy (or there's a music store nearby where you can "browse" the music books)of Scotty's "Basic Non Pedal C6 Lap Steel Method" published by Mel Bay, there's a pic of Scotty's 1932 Frypan on the front cover. The volume knob shows up pretty well.

Mike

CORRECTION!!!
I was hanging out at Scotty's a couple of days ago, and I mentioned this post. He advised me that the knob on his '32 Fry Pan was NOT the original knob! He said that Jerry Byrd had traded him out of the original knob some years ago. See what I get for making assumptions!

[This message was edited by Mike Harmon on 10 April 2004 at 08:35 PM.]

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