I did some research and here are my findings by cross checking few things.
It seems that it is coming from the cimar co.
Here is a page of the catalogue: look at the 1944

And the guitar





it is made of plywood, but not regular plywood.
It is a thin layer on top then strips of solid wood (a bit like my kitchen countertop...)then again a thin layer, strip of solid wwod and the the thin back layer
varnish is all but environemental friendly as any asian axes even today, but can withstand almost any abuse.

the sound unplugged is good and warmer than my 1993 Gibson LP standard...
It is two single pups in humbucker covers

500k and 0.42 as electronics

Once cleaned and all set-up properly it was time to try her out
the sound unpluged is good and warmer than my 1993 Gibson LP standard...same strings gauge.
Plugged it sounded liked a bad telecaster and i changed the brige pup for an HS filtertron and bridge for a MK45 1984 japanese humbucker
much much better now.
I feel that the neck is a bit "soft", i mean that if i pull and push it i make a nice tremolo kind of sound.
It seems to be made of mahogany by the look of the wood fiber ( and so say a shop that is selling one) but not as strong feeling as the gibson.
sustain is two third of the gibby, not bad for kitchen countertop plywood stuff.
Put a new spring on the "bigsby like" trem and it is working but i never used a real bigsby so i can't compare.
All in all, a nice piece(s) of wood and fun to play for a tenth of the price a a real thing.Statistics: Posted by dsmcl77 — Mon Jan 07, 2013 7:22 pm
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