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Regal parlor guitar identification
Regal parlor guitar identification











regal parlor guitar identification
  1. #Regal parlor guitar identification Patch
  2. #Regal parlor guitar identification series

#Regal parlor guitar identification series

It has the long number/letter series that includes the model (H625) and 2 smaller groups of numbers in different locations. I have a Harmony acoustic guitar branded as a Silvertone that apparently has 2 different dates stamped on the inside back of the guitar (visible through the sound hole).

regal parlor guitar identification

  • Your guitar needs an electronics evaluation and cleaning.
  • Don't replace any vintage components unless you absolutely have to.
  • This can be a variety of things from dead capacitors, dirty potentiometers, shorted wires, and even dead pickups.
  • There is no sound coming from the electronics.
  • #Regal parlor guitar identification Patch

  • Your guitar needs a bridge reglue and often a bridge plate patch.
  • The only fix is to remove the bridge, prep the area, sand the bridge to match, and reglue it.
  • Do not use glue to fill the gaps or drive screws into the bridge to bring it back down.
  • Many bridges are glued directly onto the lacquer which causes them to lift and raise the action.
  • As string tension and climate shift the wood in a guitar, they inevitably need the neck to be steamed off and a new angle carved relative to the body.
  • The strings are too high off the fretboard.
  • Your guitar needs a fretboard planing and refret or more ideally a truss rod installation.
  • Most Harmony guitars lack adjustable truss rods (or rods that still work) and so forward bow cannot be easily repaired.
  • The strings are buzzy or the neck is bowed.
  • Frets are like tires on your car, they need replacing after being used a lot.
  • Do not shove glue in there or drive a screw through the heel.
  • The neck heel is pulling away from the body.
  • Your guitar needs proper humidity and cleats.
  • Do not try to fill the cracks with glue or put clamps on the guitar to press it together.
  • This occurs when an instrument is exposed to a climate different than the ideal (70 degrees Fahrenheit and 45-50% humidity) and the wood has shrunk.












  • Regal parlor guitar identification