Vox Ultrasonic
Vox Ultrasonic | |
---|---|
1968 Vox Ultrasonic | |
Manufacturer | Vox |
Period | 1965 - 1969 |
Construction | |
Body type | Solid |
Neck joint | Bolt on |
Scale | 25.5" |
Woods | |
Body | Maple, Ash |
Neck | Maple |
Fretboard | Rosewood |
Hardware | |
Bridge | Adjustable Tune-o-matic bridge |
Pickup(s) | 2 or 3 single-coil pickups |
Colors available | |
Black, white, green, light blue, red - custom colors also made in smaller numbers |
The Vox Ultrasonic or V268 was a mid- to late-1960s hollow body thinline electric guitar. The guitar's body resembled Gibson thinline models such as the ES-335, but otherwise was quite different. The Ultrasonic had no central maple block or set neck, making it more similar in construction to Fender's thinline guitar, the Coronado.
The Ultrasonic, like all late-1960s Vox models, was manufactured by the Eko company in Italy.
Vox were well regarded as effects box manufacturers and fitted numerous effects into their guitars as well. The Ultrasonic was their high-end guitar and therefore had all available effects built in: distortion, treble/bass booster, repeater, palm-operated wah-wah, and E-tuner.
Catfish Collins of The J.B.'s and Funkadelic played the Vox Ultrasonic.
Anton Newcombe of The Brian Jonestown Massacre is a notable user of the Vox Ultrasonic.
Other Vox guitars
- Mark III (Brian Jones' Teardrop guitar)
- Mark VI
External links
- Vox Ultrasonic details and history
- Vox Ultrasonic sound samples