Offering a 1984-84 built C serial number KRAMER Duke Deluxe featuring a headless design and aluminum neck built in the USA.
The bass is in excellent condition throughout save for some minor signs of use and one more noticeable ding on top on the bass side of the body as shown in a close up shot. Other than that you will find none of the usual edge and corner bruises often see on these basses making this a rather clean specimen. It features a 30.5" short scale 24 fret fretboard, a Schaller "Double J" pickup with 3 way toggle to switch between series, parallel or phase pickup selection. The aluminum neck has wood inserts along the neck and is fully painted for a more comfortable feel. It comes in the compact soft gig bag as shown.
Some Duke history,
if you think the headless, downsized Kramer Duke series was conceived and designed as a copy of the groundbreaking Steinberger bass, think again, because that’s not half of the story.
Kramer began producing its eye-catching aluminum-neck instruments in the mid 1970s, touting their resistance to neck warpage and other problems. The aluminum necks had a slightly T-shaped profile, with wood inserts on the underside in an attempt to evoke a more natural feel. Fretboards were made of Ebonol, a substance similar to the material used in bowling balls.
While inspired by the even more unique Steinberger bass, the Duke series happened somewhat accidentally. According to a former Kramer employee, another model, the TL-8 eight-string bass (which had four tuning pegs on the headstock and the extra four anchored to the end of the body), was experiencing production problems, and when he happened to chop off the wood “wings” of one, he noticed the Steinberger-like silhouette with the remaining body portion and strings attached to it behind the bridge. Hacking off the headstock conjured up even more of a Steinberger-ish profile, so the first 100 or so Dukes were made from bodies intended for TL-8 basses. All Duke necks have wood inserts, but they were painted over to match the body.
Duke models differed from Steinbergers in more than one facet. Kramer’s effort at the downsized style had a short-scale of 30-1/2″, while the original had a full 34″ scale. Unlike Steinbergers, which were intended for use with double-ball/quick-change strings, Dukes use regular bass strings, with the ball end anchored at the headless portion of the neck. Regular strings could be used on Steinbergers if a special clamp was installed. Moreover, the tuners on Steinbergers were knurled and cylinder-shaped, whereas Dukes used conventional Schallers in a deeply routed area on the end of the body.
Both brands eventually offered headless guitars, and on Kramer Dukes, a set of string posts was installed behind the bridge to guide each string to its tuner.
The Duke bass was available in two models – the Standard and the Deluxe. Pickups were usually DiMarzios on Standards and a Schaller “Double J” on the Deluxe, which also offered a three-way mini-toggle for series, parallel, or phase pickup coil selection. The Deluxe also came with an upgrade Schaller bridge/tailpiece.
There are other differences on Dukes; the bottom edge of some early specimen sport a ridged “pad” to allow the instrument to rest in a more stable manner on a seated player’s leg. And while the jack on the Deluxe is on the same bottom edge, the Standard’s jack is on the top, where the mini-toggle is on the Deluxe. Some variants may be encountered, so a Standard might also be found with a bottom-edge jack.
Kramer Dukes were the last of the aluminum-neck Kramers. Usually found in black or white (though other colors exist), these small, easy-to-handle instruments represent a brief and interesting glimpse at not only the Kramer company, but the saga of American guitar building.
This item is sold As-Described
This item is sold As-Described and cannot be returned unless it arrives in a condition different from how it was described or photographed. Items must be returned in original, as-shipped condition with all original packaging.Learn More.
| Listed | 4 years ago |
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| Condition | Excellent (Used) Excellent items are almost entirely free from blemishes and other visual defects and have been played or used with the utmost care.Learn more |
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