Peavey Wolfgang USA Standard Archtop-Black Cherry Flame W/OHSC

$3,299.00

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Peavey Wolfgang USA Standard Archtop-Black Cherry Flame W/OHSC.

In stock

Description

Roadhouse USA:

Peavey Wolfgang USA Standard Archtop-Black Cherry Flame W/OHSC

Another excellent example of one of my favorite guitars of all time.

It is in superb condition. No dents, dings, no issues.

Great figuring on the top, although the flame pops the best under some lights due to the fade to black nature of the finish.

Plays great, the necks on all of these were awesome.

Excellent birdseye figuring on this neck and fretboard.

Comes as pictured with original Peavey hard case.

 

Country Of Origin: USA
Color: Black Cherry
Hardware Color: Chrome
Case: Original Peavey Hard Case
Electronics (Controls): Volume Tone 3 Way
Neck Wood: Birdseye Maple
Neck Type: 4 Bolt
Fretboard Wood: BIRDSEYE MAPLE
Pickup Configuration: EVH Humbuckers
Inlay Style: Black Dots
Tail Type: licensed Floyd Rose trem with D-Tuna
Body Wood: Basswood
Weight: 7lbs 8oz
Top Wood: Maple

Info:

“The original and top-of-the-line model. Made in the USA. It featured an arched (carved) top, body binding, two knobs (volume and tone), three-way pickup toggle switch, two Peavey/EVH-designed humbucker pickups, oil-finished bird’s eye maple neck and fingerboard with dual graphite reinforcement rods, ten-degree tilt headstock, and Schaller mini M6 tuners (with either pearloid or ivory colored buttons). Two base versions were offered: a solid basswood model and a solid basswood/maple cap model. (The maple cap was 5/8″ before carving.) Each version could come with either a licensed Floyd Rose tremolo with D-Tuna (d-tuner device) or a tune-o-matic bridge and hard tail piece. Solid basswood Wolfgangs were offered in gloss ivory and gloss black; solid basswood/maple cap Wolfgangs were offered in various transparent figured maple finishes (sunburst, amber, red, purple, blue, green, cherryburst, and black cherryburst) as well as vintage gold and seafoam green. Very occasionally a rejected maple top was painted either gloss black or gloss ivory.”