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Fender Guitar Serial Numbers Year Made카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 15. 03:38
Fender's production methods from the early fifties had the effect the numbers may not beconsecutive. Also overlap of serial numbers and dates come with regularity.Where to find the serial numberThe serial numbers on the guitar are provided through the years on various places.At the top of the neck plate, at the front or at the back of the head or on the cover plate of thevibrato. (Stratocaster)Between 1973 and 1981 there were periods that this is not consistently done.If you want to know the production year of your Fender guitar, you can decipher it with the serial number decoder, or find it in the tables below. Although a serial number is helpful for roughly determining the age of a guitar, this is often notthe exact date. Usually, the production date is stamped or written is on the heel of the neck.To read this it is necessary to unscrew the neck from the body.Most specifications for the Fender guitars are hardly changed. Although there have beenperiods in which major changes occurred as the acquisition of Fender by CBS, and thetransition from CBS Fender to the current owner (Fender Musical Instruments Corporation),most models are in general not changed.At the Stratocasters from the early fifties the serial numbers were stamped on the back vibratocover. On some Telecasters at the bridge between the pickup and the saddles.Patent numbersBetween 1960 and 1977, were added several patent numbers to the models.
These became in the head under the Fender logo stamped.Example:PAT, 2,573,254 2,968,204 3,143,028 2,976,755 DES 1873042,573,254 for pickup and bridge combination.2,968,204 for the single coil pickup patent awarded in 1961 under other for Jaguar, Stratocaster, Duosonic.3,143,028 the patent granted in August 1964 for Fender's adjustable neck construction.2,976,755 for the split coil pickup design. If you can not find a serial number (unreadable, worn of),you can approximate the age of a semi/electric guitar on the basis of the potentiometers.The code on potentiometers gives information about the manufacturer and the year and week when it is made.See:The Fender logo that was used can also be an indication from which period the guitar originates.Whether it is an original model or a vintage (also the old logos are used again) depends on your own estimation of the age of the guitar.spaghetti-logo 1950-1965transition logo 1960-1967CBS era logo 1967. Fender has used 3 different logos for guitars. The original logo, also called 'spaghetti logo',the transition logo and the CBS era logo.The spaghetti logo was used in the 1950s and is so named for its thin silver-colored letter with a thin black line.This logo was used in the fifties until the mid-sixties.At the end of 1959 a new logo was designed by designer Robert Perine and Leo fender himself.The logo has fatter golden letters with a thicker black border. The logo was later namedtransition logo, because it bridged the period between the thin spaghetti logo and the CBS era.The first guitar to be branded with this new logo was the Jazz Bass in 1960. All new modelsgot the new logo from that moment on.In 1967 after the takeover of Fender by CBS, the design remained the same but the letters became black with onegold-colored border.
When was my Fender instrument made? It’s a common question we get at The Music Zoo. If you have a Fender in your hands, you can use this guide to precisely date your Fender instrument all the way back to 1950. Information on Japanese and Mexican-made instruments is included towards the bottom. This information is courtesy, republished here for your convenience.
Hit the jump to see just how old that guitar or bass really is.Dating Your U.S.-Made Fender InstrumentFor most of Fender’s U.S. Instrument production history, production dates have been applied to various components.Most notably, production dates have been penciled or stamped on the butt end of the heel of the neck of most guitars and basses, although there were periods when this was not consistently done (1973 to 1981, for example) or simply omitted. Neck-dating can be useful in determining the approximate age of a guitar, but it is certainly not definitive because the neck date simply refers to the date that the individual component was produced, rather than the complete instrument.Given the modular nature of Fender production techniques, an individual neck may have been produced in a given year, then stored for a period of time before being paired with a body to create a complete guitar, perhaps, for example, in the following year. Therefore, while helpful in determining a range of production dates, a neck date is obviously not a precisely definitive reference.Most specifications for a given Fender instrument model change little (if at all) throughout the lifetime of the model. While there have been periods of dramatic change—such as the transition periods between the Leo Fender years and the CBS years or the transition between the CBS years and the current ownership—most models are generally feature-specific and do not change from year to year.Serial numbers are also helpful in determining an instrument’s production year.
For years, serial numbers have been used in various locations on Fender instruments, such as the top of the neck plate, the front or back of the headstock and the back of the neck near the junction with the body. Serial numbers were stamped on the back vibrato cover plate on early ’50s Stratocaster® guitars, and on the bridge plate between the pickup and the saddles on some Telecaster® guitars.But once again, due to Fender’s modular production methods and often non-sequential serial numbering (usually overlapping two to four years from the early days of Fender to the mid-1980s), dating by serial number is not always precisely definitive.
Dating Your InstrumentThe chart below details Fender serial number schemes used from 1950 to 1964. Notice that there is quite a bit of overlap in numbers and years. The only way to try to narrow the date range of your specific instrument is to remove the neck and check the butt end of the neck heel for a production date, which may be stamped or written there (if you’re uncomfortable doing this yourself, please refer to an experienced professional guitar tech in your area). SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATESUp to 6,0001950 to 1954Up to to 195610,000s1955 to 195610,000s to 20,000s195720,000s to 30,000s195830,000s to 40,000s195940,000s to 50,000s196050,000s to 70,000s196160,000s to 90,000s196280,000s to 90,000s196390,000s up to L10,000s1963L10,000s up to L20,000s1963L20,000s up to L50,000s1964Fender was sold to CBS in January 1965. Serial numbering didn’t change immediately because instruments continued to be made using existing, tooling, parts and serial number schemes.
The chart below details Fender serial number schemes used from 1965 to 1976. Notice that there is quite a bit of overlap in numbers and years. SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATESL50,000s up to L90,0,0,000s to 200,000s1966 to 1967200,0,000s to 300,000s1969 to 1970300,000s1971 to 1972300,000s to 500,0,000s to 500,000s1974 to 1975500,000s to 700,000s1976The charts below detail the most common Fender serial number schemes from 1976 to the present.
Once again, there is quite a bit of overlap in numbers and years. The only way to try to narrow the date range of your specific instrument is to remove the neck and check the butt end of the neck heel for a production date, which may be stamped or written there (if you’re uncomfortable doing this yourself, please refer to an experienced professional guitar tech in your area). Serial numbers with an “S” prefix denote the 1970s (signifying a CBS attempt to use serial numbers to identify production years); an “E” prefix was introduced in 1979 to denote the 1980s. As seen in the overlap of numbers and years, even these references to actual production dates are rather loose.
SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATES76 + 5 digitsS6 + 5 digits1976S7 + 5 digitsS8 + 5 digits1977S7 + 5 digitsS8 + 5 digitsS9 + 5 digits1978S9 + 5 digitsE0 + 5 digits1979S9 + 5 digitsE0 + 5 digitsE1 + 5 digits1980S9 + 5 digitsE0 + 5 digitsE1 + 5 digits19811982 saw the introduction of the U.S. Vintage Series instruments and “V”-prefix serial numbers. The only way to definitively date U.S.
Instruments with “V”-prefix serial numbers is to remove the neck and check the butt end of the neck heel for a production date, which may be stamped or written there. SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATESEI + 5 digitsE2 + 5 digitsE3 + 5 digitsV + 4, 5 or 6 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1982(For U.S.
Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)E2 + 5 digitsE3 + 5 digitsV + 4, 5 or 6 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1983(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)E3 + 5 digitsE4 + 5 digitsV + 4, 5 or 6 digits (U.S.
Fender Guitar Dating Serial Number
Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1984(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)CBS sold Fender in March 1985.
Serial numbering didn’t change because instruments continued to be made using existing tooling, parts and serial number schemes. SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATESE3 + 5 5 digitsE4 + 5 5 digitsV + 4, 5 or 6 5 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1985(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)V + 4, 5 or 6 5 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1986(For U.S.
Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)E4 + 5 5 digitsV + 4, 5 or 6 5 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1987(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)E4 + 5 5 digitsE8 + 5 5 digitsV + 4, 5 or 6 5 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1988(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)E8 + 5 5 digitsE9 + 5 5 digitsV + 5 or 6 5 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1989(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)“N”-prefix serial numbers denoting the 1990s were introduced in 1990.
The numbers and decals were produced far in advance, and some N9 decals (denoting 1999), were inadvertantly affixed to some instruments in 1990. Consequently, some 1990 guitars bear 1999 “N9” serial numbers. SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATESE9 + 5 digitsN9 + 5 digitsN0 + 5 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (U.S.
Look Up Fender Guitar Serial Numbers
Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1990(For U.S. Vintage Series, check neck date for specific year)N0 + 5 digitsN1 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 v (U.S.
Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1991N1 + 5 or 6 digitsN2 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1992N2 + 5 or 6 digitsN3 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (U.S.
Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1993N3 + 5 or 6 digitsN4 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1994N4 + 5 or 6 digitsN5 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1995N5 + 5 or 6 digitsN6 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1996N6 + 6 or 6 digitsN7 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 v (U.S. Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)1997N7 + 5 or 6 digitsN8 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series)1998N9 + 5 or 6 digitsV + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)19991999“Z”-prefix serial numbers denoting the new millennium appeared on U.S.-made instruments in 2000. Z0 denotes 2000; Z1 denotes 2001, etc.
American Deluxe Series instruments use the same dating convention, but with the addition of a “D” in front of the “Z”, i.e., DZ1, DZ2, etc. As always, there is typically some number prefix overlap and carryover from year to year. SERIAL NUMBERSPRODUCTION DATESN9 + 5 or 6 digitsZ0 + 5 or 6 digitsDZ0 + 5 or 6 digits (Am. Deluxe)V + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)2000Z0 + 5 or 6 digitsZ1 + 5 or 6 digitsDZ1 + 5 or 6 digits (Am. Deluxe)V + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)2001Z1 + 5 or 6 digitsZ2 + 5 or 6 digitsDZ2 + 5 or 6 digits (Am. Deluxe)V + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)2002Z2 + 5 or 6 digitsZ3 + 5 or 6 digitsDZ3 + 5 or 6 digits (Am.
Deluxe)V + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)2003Z3 + 5 or 6 digitsZ4 + 5 or 6 digitsDZ4 + 5 or 6 digits (Am. Deluxe)V + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)XN4 + 4 digits2004Z4 + 5 or 6 digitsZ5 + 5 or 6 digitsDZ5 + 5 or 6 digits (Am. Deluxe)V + 5 or 6 digits (American Vintage Series except ’52 Telecaster)XN5 + 4 digits2005The “odd” serial numbers on the chart below exist somewhat outside the more well-known Fender serial number schemes. If you have what you consider an odd serial number, it might appear here. NUMBERDESCRIPTIONAMXN + 6 digitsCalifornia Series electric guitars and basses; 1997 and 1998DN + 6 digitsAmerican Deluxe series instruments; 1998 and 1999NC(XXXXXX)Squier® Strat Bullets (dating unclear)FN(XXXXXX)U.S.-made guitars and basses destined for export market. Some may have stayed in the U.S.
Or found their way back (made to Standard Stratocaster specs; dating unclear)I(XXXXXXX)A limited number of these “I” series guitars were made in 1989 and 1990. They were made for the export market and have “Made in USA” stamped on the neck heel.LE(XXXXXX)Blonde Jazzmaster® and Jaguar® guitars with gold hardware made in 1994.