Wheeling and Dealing Nik Huber Guitars

This page belongs to me, Paul Weber - freelance electric guitar aficionado and part-time dealer. I've hooked up with german luthier extraordinaire Nik Huber to get some of his world-class guitars around and with german custom pickup maker Harry Häussel. These 2 people must be amongst the most underrated music industry participants I know... Do check out my website http://www.ugroove.biz for more six string action ;-)

Google
Web www.gibsonusa.com
www.fenderusa.com www.prsguitars.com

Monday, May 21, 2007

One year lead time horizon reached...

Long phone call w/ Nik this morning re the status of some ideas / orders I had been toying around with.
The whole backlog has slowly been creeping up - despite the fact that no new dealers in the US have been added - and is now at 160 units ordered worldwide.
This amounts to over 1 year (@140 guitars/year) wait time.
It also coincidentally means that I dearly hope that I'll be able to see something "special", a 50th tribute, in time for some kind of june 2008 (hint hint, wink wink) deadline.

Fingers crossed - business is good for master Nik :-)

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Huber Bigsby Junior


Huber Bigsby Junior
Originally uploaded by Uncle GroOve.
Fresh from the horse's mouth. A spanking new, minty cool Nik Huber Bigsby Junior. Figured mahogany body and neck, creme colored binding, rosewood fretboard, 22 frets 25.5" scale, Kluson tuners, Haeussel P90+ pickup.
I guess it don't get any cooler (or hotter?) than this.
Bo**dy hell!!

Friday, December 22, 2006

Nik Huber tribute from.... Hamer :-)


Well.
Here is the news from the fine builders at Hamer USA (i.e. Kaman Group).
Since no really new models have surfaced since the launch of the Improv (4 yrs ago?), the hamerfolk have jumped on the Telly-mania that looks to have engulfed the world since about 1 year (strats are out, teleplanks are "in", dude!).

As per someone's comments in a US forum, there is something about it that looks huber-esque. If I were Nik, I'd be flattered!
In any case I like it - with the only exception of the "victory" inlays, which I'd really drop. I can understand the "support our men in the Gulf" thing, but unfortunately there isn't any victory to speak of, so...

Anyway - it'll be interesting to see the production pics and what people are going to spec as far as finishes, etc. The P90HB is wise (and trendy, I might add) as it allows to go for a full HB drop-in.

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Nik Huber Redwood - a review by Guitar Player


I coldn't have expressed anything mentioned below in a better manner.
Well done Nik, bravo Bob Willcutt and - thankyou, Guitar Player!!

Nik Huber Redwood

December 2006

The name Nik Huber might ring few bells in guitar circles here in the USA, but in his native Germany, Huber has achieved a reputation on par with the likes of Tom Anderson, Don Grosh, and John Suhr. Like these respected American makers, Huber lets his designs be informed by great instruments of the past, while striving for originality. Outwardly, the Redwood appears to be a reworked Les Paul. Dig beneath the surface, however, and you find notable Fender-inspired elements, such as a 252" scale. Probe deeper still, and you uncover more than enough originality of design to let you throw the old “Gibson-style” and “Fender-style” preconceptions out the window. Simply put, the Redwood aspires to being a supremely playable instrument that blends power, definition, warmth, and sustain.

Construction
As the name implies, the Redwood carries a highly figured carved redwood top—unusual, in that this is a softwood—atop a chambered mahogany body. Every piece of timber on this guitar exudes quality, from the finely grained mahogany of the neck and one-piece back to the rippling, broadly waved top. Even the switch tip, pickup mounting rings, and the trussrod and control cavity covers are made from wood—the former two of birdseye maple, and the latter of ebony. As much as the beauty of the woods grabs you, their weight makes an instant impression, as well. The mahogany used here is light and resonant. Add the considerable chambering in the body and the light redwood top, and you have a “solidbody” electric that tips the scales at a little under 7 lbs. To keep it all sounding and looking good, the Huber finishing process employs polyurethane base coats with a clear acrylicethane top coat. Nitrocellulose lacquer is available as an option.

The neck on this guitar is a real joy, with a shallow “D” profile tending toward “C” at the shoulders. It slides effortlessly through the hand, and the heavily sculpted heel provides easy middle-finger access right up to the 22nd fret. Despite the longer scale length, the Redwood’s wrapover bridge contributes to easy string bending. It’s a nifty piece of hardware in its own right, too. Made in-house by Huber, the bridge is carved from a solid block of aluminum. It features individual, intonation-adjustable saddles, and it’s designed for maximum coupling between the strings and body. (A Huber vibrato tailpiece is also available.)

Huber’s pickups are made by German winder Harry Häussel to the guitar maker’s specs. The Redwood’s pair are made in the image of the hallowed PAF, but with a view toward transmitting a little more clarity. To that end, the bridge ’bucker features alnico 3 magnets and has a DC resistance of approximately 7.9k ohms, while the neck unit is made with alnico 2 and reads around 6.8k ohms.

Tones
After traveling from Germany to Kentucky, Kentucky to California, and, finally, from California to a rather damp New England, the Redwood needed a tweak of the trussrod to achieve a little relief in the neck, and lift the strings out of the buzz zone. Once adjusted, it still retained a low, fast action, and virtually effortless playability. With its carved-top, single-cutaway looks, and easy bending, it’s easy to forget that the Redwood has a 25 1/2" scale. Plug it in, though (in this case through a Dr. Z Z-28, a TopHat Club Royale, and a Marshall DSL60), and the characteristics of that longer scale ring through. The guitar has a snappy, tight attack with a harmonic sparkle that 2434"-scale guitars struggle to achieve, along with impressive clarity—courtesy of the well-conceived

Häussel pickups. Along with the crispness and shimmer, however, there’s a warmth and girth that lends real muscle to the tone. Played clean, the Redwood excels at anything from round, jazzy tones—particularly when set to the neck humbucker—to twangy, cutting country with the coil split engaged and the pickup selector on the bridge or combined settings. Jacked through the class-A TopHat or the Marshall on crunchier settings, the Redwood performs some impressive Les Paul-like tricks, oozing all the grind and sustain a rock lead player could hope for.

One of the Redwood’s biggest surprises, though, is the wiry, stinging blues tones it conjures when set to the neck pickup with the coil split. Close your eyes, and you can almost picture a battered ’57 Strat. The Redwood is probably not aggressive enough for metal, but it does just about anything else extremely well, and it quickly reminds you how addictive superb playability and tone can become. Now, if only my bank account could support a Huber habit . . .

Specs
• 1 11/6" nut width
• One-piece mahogany neck with hybrid “D-into-C” profile
• 25 sup>1/2" "-scale bound ebony fretboard with abalone dots
• Chambered mahogany body with carved curly redwood top
• Two H. Häussel humbucking pickups with gold-plated
covers and birdseye-maple mounting rings
• Master Volume and Tone controls with push/push switch on the Tone knob for coil splitting
• 3-way pickup selector
• Gold-plated aluminum Huber wrapover bridge with individually adjustable saddles
• 22 Dunlop 6150 (medium-jumbo) frets
• Gold-plated Schaller M6 locking mini tuners with ebony buttons
• Factory strings: D’Addario .010-.046 set
• 6.8 lbs


Instant Gratification
Nik Huber Redwood


Who’s It For?:
Discerning players seeking superlative
tone and playability in a hand-built guitar.
Kudos:
A breeze to play. Easy on the back. Surprisingly broad range of out-standing sounds.
Concerns:
None.
Price:
$5,025 street price
Contact:
U.S. distribution by Willcutt Guitars, (859) 276-0675;
www.nikhuber-guitars.com

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Slow Summer? Hot Autumn :-)

I've been missing from these pages for some time. But all is not quiet, and all is not dead :-)

Updates:
Getting 3 Orcas prepped for northern Italy - 1 korina plaintop, 1 quilt, 1 flametop.
At the SHG Guitar show (nov 12th, 2006) we're delivering a BRW neck dolphin that will feature an exceptional quilt top, a "peacock blue" top, BRW pickup rings and p.up tops.
Definitely excited, is the least I / we can say, LOL

Coming up... Nik is chipping away on the "50th Anniversary Goldtop" which will be done in collaboration w/ the fine guys over the Atlantic at RS Guitarworks. Will feature aged hardware and finish (slight crackle on the goldtop, a little nick here and there), a naked fingerboard, 12th fret 56-06 inlay, locking Kluson /TP tuners, TOM bridge.

Getting ready to receive Flying Dolphin #11 - one of the very last of the 25 originally planned. It's going to be a fixed bridge job, w/ BRW pickup rings, covers, gold hardware, inlayed fretboard.

Coming up for 2007:
*Apparently Nik won't be producing any Orcas anymore - if so it will be exclusively on a custom basis (price to be negotiated at each build).
The Orca will be replaced by a 25" scale Dolphin w/ LP styled controls, switch on upper bout, bridge to be determined (TOM or wraparound).
In this vein I'm ordering a 25" Redwood w/ korina body and neck, naked ebony 'board, P90HB p.ups... 3 control layout (V-V-T) and switch in the upper bout. From this prototype we might even see a new production model :-)

Other things I'm considering are a Swamp Ash dolphin, 25.5" scale flame maple neck + 'board, 4+2 headstock, 3 control layout. Pickups: Telecaster "harrybarden" in the bridge position and a P90 soapbar in the neck. Finish will be a classic '57 like 2-tone sunburst on body and headstock face. Hopefully Nik will let me have binding on bottom and top of the body.... ;-)

Plenty of meat cooking over here, as you can see :-) !!

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Gary Moore / Peter Green Orca review...

You may remember the PG Orca which we had delivered some months ago (see 3 posts ago).
The owner could not keep it and found a willing buyer in another player - collector who has access to some real 50s Les pauls and who owns a 52->57 "Conversion" LP.
her is what the new owner has to say (names withheld for privacy reasons):


Hey Paul,
I bought the PG Orca on Friday, and the below is what I told J.E.:

O.K. Here's my first impression of it so far...

It is perhaps the best "playing" guitar I've ever held in my hands.
Initially when I first picked it up when I met you, it felt little "foreign" to me especially considering I just came from playing '50s les pauls for about 2 hours straight (and little bit of '50s strats).
But, after raising the action little bit (probably should raise it a bit more), I had no problem "locking in" with it. The string tension feels pretty much the way I want it, not too tight and not too loose. It has what I call "rich sweetness" at the fingertips when I play it unplugged that I look for in every guitar.
Those that have that, I can just play unplugged all day long.
Great resonance, no dead spots on the neck, very comfortable access to the high frets beyond the 15th fret. Very easy to play, and my right hand also likes the lower angle from the bridge to the headstock,
which is what I'm used to with my conversion.
It's a new guitar, but does not feel stiff, cold, plastic, and well... "new" like many new guitars feel to me, hence my general aversion to most of them.
This one feels more "old-ish" and warm instead.

As to the comparisons to other guitars I'm familiar with... it's like a very good '50s les paul with some sprinkles of '50s fender chime and sweetness on it.
My conversion sounds bigger and has more woodiness and hollowness to its tone (but then, it is like that compared to a few '50s bursts and GTs I have access to also), but it also has more "woofyness" and "compression" to
its sound (in les pauls in general) that I sometimes would like to dial out when playing with my bands.
The Orca doesn't have that woofyness and sounds more open, not as compressed as the les pauls.
It just sounds really sweet when doing the OD/crunch tone and sounds really pretty when played clean.
The notes have long sustain and "pop" to them, which is fantastic.

I could probably say more, but I'll stop here for now since the honeymoon could be over next wee! ;-) Thus far though, Nik Huber has achieved for me what PRS (and others so far) has failed to do...


Pretty Damn Good, I'd say.
And comes right on the hell of a very favourable review of one of Bob Willcutt's Orca guitars in Vintage Guitars.
It can't get better than this, right?

BTW - his "honeymoon" ain't over yet...here is the last mail I received from him:


Thanks Paul.
Yeah, I'm having a blast with the Orca. It is without a doubt the best new
guitar I've ever played. Last week or so, I've been a/b'ing it with my
52/27 conversion every chance I get and shake my head in disbelief how good
the Orca sounds in comparison...

D.


-----Original Message-----
From: P.]
Sent: Monday, July 17, 2006 8:28 AM
To: D.
Subject: Re: Peter Green Orca on TGP

Hiya Don...
Yup - 095s are the way Nik strings 'em!
Glad to see the PG is holding up to your expectations to the point of
breaking its strings!! :-)


D. wrote:
> > Paul,
> >
> > Do you know which strings Nik used on the PG Orca? I broke the high E and
> > put an Ernie Ball Regular Slinky 10 on it, and it feels stiffer and thicker
> > than what was on there.
> > The 9.5s, maybe?
> > Thanks.
> >
> > D

Monday, June 26, 2006

Dolphin Controversy



Apparently (I am not privy to all details) an american (texan, actually) guitar manufacturer has sent a letter to Nik Huber, forbidding him to use any "dolphin" inlays on his guitars - be it in the fretboard or on the headstock.

Nik Huber had prepped some very fine instruments for the Summer NAMM show in Austin, TX (same state as the aforementioned manufacturer) and now of course he needs to radically alter his plans.
Last year, of about 50 instruments with Dolphin inlays that were produced, about half ended in the US; many of these were moreover built on specific customer order basis (the customer can actually order whatever inlay he likes, beside cetaceans).
So it isn' t a question of an aggressive market practice on part of Nik Huber, as both builders are light-years away from having "saturated" any given "market" in electric guitars - which is suffering anyway from a glut of overproduction by the hands of the traditional heavyweights: Fender, Gibson, PRS.

So what gives?

Is it just a struggling competitor trying to stay afloat in a very competitive environment and therefore resorting to desperate techniques to do so?
It seems unlikely, as this texan niche builder does indeed have his own loyal -albeit small - following.
But Nik Huber has been featured on Vintage Guitar, Musicians Hotline and is bound for a nice article on Tonequest come July - something other manufacturers can only dream of.
Nik Huber is also being carried and sponsored by such heavyweights as Willcutt Guitars and Synergy Guitars - who out of free choice and not on the basis of any comparative factor based on dolphin inlays (!), decided they'd carry Nik's products.
Nik Huber's guitars are being sought by professionals and collectors alike for their inherent quality, in looks and tone; the looks of the guitar go way beyond the details of the fretboard (matter of fact some of Nik's most stunning guitars have no fretboard decoration at all).
Just by preventing Nik Huber from utilizing Dolphin inlays, the texan competitor will not achieve what it expects - i.e. higher sales volumes, revenues, profit margins. These will only derive from improvements in the production methods, distribution, commercial agreements with dealers / distributors, visibility, overall workmanship (if necessary), overall tone (if it be the case).

Ok - So what is the basis of this mess?

We're discussing the whole notion whereby the concept of putting "dolphin inlays" can be trademark (apparently it was thus done), therefore preventing anyone else from doing the same.The use of the "dolphin" name associated with a guitar is also a no-no; Nik calls his main guitar "Dolphin", the competitor however calls it an A****n (the model) Dolphin (further characterization).
Ironically the german bass manufacturer, Warwick, also produces and sitributes worldwide a Dolphin bass, complete with dolphin fretboard inlays.
As of today, said manufacturer (bigger than both guitar builders mentioned in this article) has never even cared about any dolphin-originated-conflict. Probably the same manufacturer will neverr receive any letters from any texan attorney, being that it is sufficiently big to be able to stave-off any form of legal aggression stemming from a much smaller opponent.

The "texan dolphins" themselves look quite different, and the manner in which they're inlayed in the fretboard is also quite dissimilar (no "smoke-filled-room" thesis will ever stand in this specific case IMHO).
To the texan, apparently even Orca inlays would not be acceptable - the other builder went as far as trademarking (conceptually) any sort of fish, whale, seal, sea lion inlay.
Thus it is legally acceptable for me to be the first to say something like "my trademark are pea-green guitars", thus preventing anyone from building any guitar which is pea green in colour (or variations on the theme - which may cause "confusion" in the eyes of the general public), or even naming their guitars "Pea model" or "Green model".

We're clearly at the very edge of outright controversy - while it is true that *inventions* and *intellectual property* must be defended vigorously when there is an actual invention, be it a finished product or a full fledged innovative concept, I strongly believe that allowing for the trademarking of even the most tenuous and generic idea or concept prevents innovation from taking place.
This allows companies and/or individuals to effortlessly manipulate and sidetrack competition and evolution for the better, and even to passively extract some sort of undeserved economic advantage ("passive yield") - as they can milk the competitor's real efforts and success.
By the same token, the family of George Beauchamp - the inventor of the amplified guitar that carries his name (patent 2,089,171, registered in 1937) - could at this point sue any and all manufacturers of electric guitars. A quite laughable idea by today's standards - yet, given the right amount of time and money, and the overall framework, they could attempt to pull it off and prevent *any* other companies from building electric / amplified steel stringed guitars.



Specific Links Of Interest


Caveat: the above article is the copyright of Paul C. Weber (2006), all the opinions expressed are his own. The article is being published in it's present form without any prior approval or help by Nik Huber or Nik Huber Guitars. Some data is necessarily implied by the writer as the writer does not have direct access to certain specific documents.


Keywords. Robin Guitars, Robin Avalon Dolphin Model, Dolphin Inlays, Nik Huber Dolphin, Warwick Dolphin Bass