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Author Topic:   Gfi Owners "info Please"
Herb C Clarkson
Member

From: Indianapolis,Indiana,USA

posted 03 April 2004 12:29 PM     profile     
HELLO OUT THERE!!!!!! There seems to be a very strong interest by Steelers in GFI Guitars. I see and here more of them. Any GFI owners that would like to coment, please do so. I sure would appreciate your thoughts. (Staying in tune, pedal action, how quite and is the guitar stable while playing etc.)
Larry Robbins
Member

From: Fort Edward, New York, USA

posted 03 April 2004 01:54 PM     profile     
I owned a S-10 GFI that was a fine guitar.
Very well made,light weight, smooth pedal action,and stayed in tune,and sounded good to my ear!.....What was I thinking when I sold it? I would surely buy one again.And
if thier good enough for Norm Hamlet.......
Del Rangel
Member

From: Sacramento, CA, USA

posted 03 April 2004 02:11 PM     profile     
Well, its solidly and cleanly put together, light, stays in tune, has smooth pedal and lever action. I started out with a GFI SD-10, and now have U-12 keyless. I think the keyless setup is spot-on. For a new guitar I think they are a great value. Also, you don't have to wait forever to get one. Gene Fields makes a good number of them every year and Bobbe Seymour always has a few in stock. For my tastes, if I want a lightweight mica guitar I'll buy aother GFI. If I wanted a lacquer finished wood body, I'll get a Fessenden. In fact I am saving-up right now for a Fessy. These seem to me to be two of the best values out there.

[This message was edited by Del Rangel on 03 April 2004 at 02:39 PM.]

Rex Thomas
Member

From: Thompson's Station, TN

posted 03 April 2004 02:48 PM     profile     
Check your e-mail.
r johnson
Member

From: flatrock mi

posted 03 April 2004 05:04 PM     profile     
I have a GFI d-10 keyless 8 and 7. Very well santisfied. there are a few minor thing that could be better but over all it is a exceptional value.
Damir Besic
Member

From: La Vergne,TN

posted 04 April 2004 07:56 AM     profile     
I have only best to say about guitars and people at the GFI company.Great guitars for a great price built by a great people who provide a great support.I`ll get another one some day soon.
Emmett Roch
Member

From: Dripping Springs, Texas

posted 04 April 2004 09:06 AM     profile     
I agree with everything that's been said here. And, the service is second to absolutely nobody in the business. Gene and Bob are winners, like their guitar.

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___________________
GFI S-10


Jim Peters
Member

From: St. Louis, Missouri, USA

posted 04 April 2004 10:09 AM     profile     
I have a 6mth old GFI S10 with pad that plays and sounds exceptional. It took me 1 hour to change it over from Day to Emmons never having even seen the bottom of one. Super design,light and sounds great. JimP
Robert Porri
Member

From: Windsor, Connecticut, USA

posted 04 April 2004 11:16 AM     profile     
I've only been playing PSG for 3 months. So for what my newbie opinion is worth, here it is. When I bought my guitar, I decided to go right for the GFI S10 Ultra keyless with the pad. From what Gene told me at the show I saw him at, the student models are very close to the Ultra's also. He in fact seemed to be steering me to the more economical student model. After some thinking though, I ended up with the Ultra. I've been very impressed with the support I've had from GFI. Not being familiar with any other PSG's, I don't know how adjustable certain things are on others, but I've been very happy with easy adjustments I've been able to make to knee lever "play" for a more comfortable fit and moving pedals just a bit. The guitar stays in tune well, and now that I'm used to it, changing strings is easy. The GFI pedals seem very smooth and sure to me. And, if I say this correctly, I think that cabinet drop basically does not occur.

Bob P.

[This message was edited by Robert Porri on 04 April 2004 at 11:19 AM.]

Tom Callahan
Member

From: Dunlap, Tennessee, USA

posted 04 April 2004 03:38 PM     profile     
I did buy the GFI student model from Bobbe last month. I wanted one to keep in Atlanta and be able to practice when I was not at home.
It is very light and is a dream to keep tuned once you get use to the all pull tuning having had only a push pull up to now.
Personally I think that it is a great little guitar at a vey good price. The pedal action and the knee levers is quick and smooth. Very quiet.

------------------
T.C.
Emmons S-10
G.F.I. S-10

James Quackenbush
Member

From: Pomona, New York, USA

posted 04 April 2004 08:21 PM     profile     
I had a used GFI D-10 at one time , and I needed a paddle for one of the knee levers ..I called Gene at GFI and told him what I needed, and without any hesitation , he sent me a knee lever with a paddle on it , and never even charged me !!...Now you can't beat service like that !!...He stands behind his steel, and I will NEVER forget that !!..They're a great bang for the buck steel ..Jim
Herb C Clarkson
Member

From: Indianapolis,Indiana,USA

posted 04 April 2004 08:42 PM     profile     
Thanks again to all !!!!!, I appreicate your time, knowledge, effort and comments.
Herb
Billy Morgan
Member

From: Talladega, Alabama

posted 05 April 2004 06:35 AM     profile     
I bought the GFI SD-10 from Del Rangel that he mentioned above and found it to be a great guitar. It is lightweight, stays in tune good, well built, easy to work on, and as a bonus it also has great tone. I also needed a part and called Gene Fields and he sent it to me at no charge. Great guitar, great value, and great service, a combination thats hard to beat.

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Scotty Wenzel
Member

From: Lawrence, Kansas, USA

posted 05 April 2004 08:00 AM     profile     
I've got the SM-10 Student model which plays ands sounds great. I'm probably gonna take a look for a S-10 or SD-10 Ultra to upgrade to pretty soon. Good folks, and fine products!!

Robert Henderson
Member

From: Nashville, Tennessee, USA

posted 05 April 2004 03:15 PM     profile     
Dollar for dollar, pound for pound, there ain't a much better steel around!
Mike Sigler
Member

From: Ohio

posted 05 April 2004 04:10 PM     profile     
I have played everything around, and this little machine is the ticket.. Tone to the bone, good solid cabnet and stays in tune great!
I have used mine on the Grand Ole Opry many times.. and look forward to having another GFI in the future.
MS
Scotty Wenzel
Member

From: Lawrence, Kansas, USA

posted 05 April 2004 05:53 PM     profile     
Del and folks using the keyless models:

I'm about to make the jump to a SD-10 Ultra and think I should go ahead and get it with the Keyless tuners. How would you rate this system? Is it worth the added (small) cost?

Thanks a bunch for the input!

Scotty

Earnest Bovine
Member

From: Los Angeles CA USA

posted 05 April 2004 05:56 PM     profile     
Funny you should ask, as I just pulled my GFI put from the bottom of the pile and played it on a couple of saloon gigs.
I really liked it.
The tone is very pure and clear. In some strange way I feel like the tone jumps out at me with less effort than on my other steels (Zum, Franklin, Sho-Bud).
There is less cabinet drop, and more consistent pitch on the raises, than on my other steels.

On the downside:
1. A knee lever that lowers 3 strings (with a half stop on 2 of them) is very long and stiff, and I haven't got the whole tone lowers to be consistently in tune. The problem is apparently in the lower-return springs, which (unlike all my other steels) are not adjustable, and are too short. If I could use a longer spring, it would not get so much stiffer toward the end a long pull.
2. Lowering to a rasied pitch comes back sharp. For eaxmple on string 5 of E9, raise B to D and let it lower back to C#. The pitch is sharp. In fairness, all my other steels have this same problem except Franklin.

Your experience may differ, as my GFI is not like the current models. It was Gene's personal guitar and may be about 15 years old. It's a double neck: 12-string steel, and 8-string fretted neck, not keyless, with way too many knee levers.

I think I'll take it to the Viva Cantina this week on Thursday and Friday.

BobbeSeymour
Member

From: Hendersonville TN USA

posted 05 April 2004 07:39 PM     profile     
You won't believe how many we sell and how happy everyone is with them, Doyle Grisham(Jimmy Buffet steeler), Charlie just bought one,(with the "Loretta Lynn" band), Norm Hamlet,(Merle Haggard),Mike Fried(Gary Allen,)Fred Newell,(Porter Waggner),Ronnie Miller,(Charlie Pride), Ralph Mooney(happily unemployeed at the moment),are only a few great players that have chosen the GFI to make their living on.
As I have said before, Good tone, light, small, strong,very durable, very easy to change a set-up on, parts and service are ledgendary. Yes, a very well priced modern steel guitar, I don't know how you can beat these qualities. This guitar isn't a compromise, it's the best of everything. Including delivery after ordering one,as we keep them in stock at all times. Seriously, check them out, you won't be sorry.
This is the guitar of the present And future, This isn't the only guitar in the world, but it is one of the best.
bobbe
Jim Peters
Member

From: St. Louis, Missouri, USA

posted 05 April 2004 08:08 PM     profile     
Scotty, mine is a keyless ultra, the system works flawlessly, stays in tune, weighs next to nothing, is stable. Keyless is a matter of choice, I bought mine used, and would have liked it either configuration. You don't have to wind the string, but you have to fuss a little bit to hook the string around the screwhead, but it is simple, and sounds GREAT!
Herb C Clarkson
Member

From: Indianapolis,Indiana,USA

posted 05 April 2004 09:57 PM     profile     
Fellow Steelers its great to hear reply from all of you, from the guys that have only played a few months to the LEGENDS! who still entertain us your all the best!!!!! Long Live Steel Guitar.
Thanks,
Herb
Jeff Hogsten
Member

From: Flatwoods Ky USA

posted 06 April 2004 12:59 AM     profile     
I havent heard or played one in person but I have been very impressed with what I have heard from Pat Seavers on the Nashville live talent contest great great tone Jeff
Jeff Hogsten
Member

From: Flatwoods Ky USA

posted 06 April 2004 01:01 AM     profile     
many manufacters even some that make them say the keyless guitars done sound as good since we are talking GFI here what do you all think about this I would love to go keyless Jeff
Ernie Pollock
Member

From: Mt Savage, Md USA

posted 06 April 2004 05:49 AM     profile     
GFI has great tone, great looks and the man that makes em is a 'real' great fellow, you know, Gene Fields. His guitar is the future for pedal steel tone!! Never seen or heard a bad GFI, ever!!

Ernie

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Del Rangel
Member

From: Sacramento, CA, USA

posted 06 April 2004 07:44 AM     profile     
Scotty,
I like the keyless setup that Gene Fields has designed. He seems to take a lot of time to develop well constructed and practical parts for his steels. The keyless head is simple, strong, works well and tunes easily. After you change a couple of strings you get the hang of it. With a phillips screwdrive, loosen the approriate anchor screw, remove the old string, bring the tuning lever in, one clockwise wrap of the string around the anchor screw, tighten the screw, snip with diags, and tune it up. I can do it in less than 2 minutes without rushing--and I am a hack. If you are playing out, its a real joy compared to all the turning that has to go down with a regular keyed guitar--particularly on those thin strings. Without a doubt, you can change a string very quickly--much faster than you would be able to normally. I have to add however, that I have yet to break a string on this guitar. I change strings out every 2-3 months. Is it worth it? To me it is.
Robert Porri
Member

From: Windsor, Connecticut, USA

posted 06 April 2004 11:16 AM     profile     
Some of you have me wondering why I break a string every 2 or 3 weeks on my GFI. When I hear someone say they never break strings, I'm thinking they must mean "never", as in not too often. But I am totally happy with the guitar.

Bob P.

John Moss
Member

From: Childress, Texas-USA

posted 06 April 2004 04:15 PM     profile     
Hey Folks,
I just got me a new GFI D-10 8&5 from Bobbe Seymour. He is a true gentleman to deal with. It is the solid blacked one on he has or had on his web site. Beautiful.
All I can say is WOW! It is a work of art in all aspects. Tone warm and big to the bone.
I am very proud to own this instrument.
Happy Pickin'
John Boy
Walter Hamlin
Member

From: Talladega, Alabama, USA

posted 07 April 2004 06:53 PM     profile     
I own a GFI. Got it from Bobbe Seymour. As he and Billy Cooper told me, it is a super guitar. The tone is great. I like the lighter weight also. I use it when I go out to play and leave a heavier one set up to practice on. I use it with a Hilton pedal and you talk about sounding good,it does.
Walter Hamlin
Member

From: Talladega, Alabama, USA

posted 07 April 2004 06:55 PM     profile     
I own a GFI. Got it from Bobbe Seymour. As he and Billy Cooper told me, it is a super guitar. The tone is great. I like the lighter weight also. I use it when I go out to play and leave a heavier one set up to practice on. I use it with a Hilton pedal and you talk about sounding good,it does.
Stephen O'Brien
Member

From: Cortlandt Manor, NY, USA

posted 07 April 2004 06:56 PM     profile     
I like GFI guitars a lot, in fact I own a keyless model and it's great. Probably the best value in a steel guitar. BUT, I did own a standard keyhead model at one time. Has anybody out there noticed that the tuning key for string 10 on the E9 neck can obstruct the tuning key for string 1 on the C6th neck? That design flaw drove me nuts.
Jody Sanders
Member

From: Magnolia,Texas

posted 07 April 2004 09:35 PM     profile     
The reason the GFI is a great guitar is because it was designed and built bt Gene Fields. Gene is a master designer and builder having years of expierience in steel guitar design and building from Fender and EMCI(to name just two) and on to GFI. Jody.
C Dixon
Member

From: Duluth, GA USA

posted 08 April 2004 07:59 AM     profile     
quote:
"When I hear someone say they never break strings, I'm thinking they must mean "never", as in not too often"

I would agree.

carl

John Wiesner
Member

From: Clifton Park, New York, USA

posted 08 April 2004 05:58 PM     profile     
The GFI is a great guitar, I am a new steel player and have not been cast in stone yet, as far as my opinions. I had a GFI-SD-10 that I just sold to my steel guiter teacher, this was truly a great steel.It stayed in tune and sounded great, I should of had my head examined for selling it but Having two great guitars it a bit over the edge when you are first starting out. I had one dealindg with Bob At GFI, it was very positive , I received great fast service and at a fair price. Gene Field has made a very positive impression on me, when I visited the web site, He has made special steel guitars for people that have lost some of there natural resources. That should tell you a lot about the character of the company.
Damir Besic
Member

From: La Vergne,TN

posted 10 April 2004 05:05 PM     profile     



and it sounds as good as it looks...

[This message was edited by Damir Besic on 10 April 2004 at 05:06 PM.]

Fred Martin
Member

From: Flagstaff, Arizona,USA

posted 10 April 2004 06:42 PM     profile     
A few years back I bought an early 90's GFI D10 from Jerry Wallace. This guitar just amazes me regarding how well it is built and how clean the mechanics are on it. Ive lusted after a GFI Ultra for awhile but just seems foolish to part with the one Ive got. I had 2 tuning keys that were stripped before I got it and sent the keyhead to Gene Fields. Got the repair done and dug through the box for the bill, there was none, called Gene and he said, just say good things about us. You know thats easy when someone treats you that good. Got any doubts about GFI go listen to Fred Newell play sometime.
David Weaver
Member

From: Aurora, CO USA

posted 10 April 2004 09:07 PM     profile     
I bought mine used a couple of years ago and couldn't be happier with it. D10.
Al Marcus
Member

From: Cedar Springs,MI USA

posted 10 April 2004 09:35 PM     profile     
I had a GFI U12 and liked it,I probably shouldn't have sold it.But you can't keep them all.......al

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My Website..... www.cmedic.net/~almarcus/

Gere Mullican
Member

From: LaVergne, Tennessee, USA

posted 11 April 2004 07:04 AM     profile     
I couldn't be happier with a steel than I am with my SD-10. It is a beautiful blue and I just flat love it. I only have one thing to say on the down side: the way the pedal board attaches to the legs, I don't like. I wish it would have a bolt going thru the legs for a more solid connection. Like Merle Haggard says. "It Ain't Love But It Ain't Bad". The connection is fairly solid but I did have one small problem when I first got it. I didn't slide the little plate all the way over and it came loose as I was playing. I realized what happened and re attached it and from then on I just made sure I had it screwed tight. And the weight that everybody says is "light". I never owned a double neck pedal steel but when I go to haul this sucker around and put it in and out of the car, it is still "heavy". Of course I am an old man and not as strong as most folks. I have never talked with Gene Fields in any manner and have never had any kind of problem with my GFI so I can't speak personally of any dealings, but I have read nothing but good things about him and the company and I believe if I ever had a problem I would be treated fairly. Gene if you read this post, I thank you for making a gread pedal steel guitar. I have only been playing for about 60 years and have only owned 4 during all those years. A Fender 400, 1 Marlen S10, 1 Marled SD10 and now this GFI SD10. I can only say I love it. Thanks.
Gere
Emmett Roch
Member

From: Dripping Springs, Texas

posted 11 April 2004 07:14 AM     profile     
Gere, they all gain weight when they're on the scales at an airline ticket counter My GFI in the case is about two pounds under the point where they start asking for a lot more money to ship it.

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___________________
GFI S-10


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