Yamaha electric guitar models
The Yamaha Corporation is a multinational corporation and conglomerate based in Japan with a wide range of products and services, predominantly musical instruments, motorcycles, power sports equipment and electronics.
Yamaha SG Series first era (1966–1971)
Yamaha began using the "SG" prefix for their solid bodied guitars when they introduced their first solid-body model in 1966 and continued using the SG prefix up until 1981.There were three SG eras - the first era SGs, lasting from 1966 to 1971, saw guitars with double cut-away bodies with similar features to the Fender Jazzmaster. These guitars had single digit suffixes - like SG-3, SG-5 and SG-7.SG3
Features:
- the round Yamaha logo on the headstock is not a decal, it's a die cast metal piece with chrome tuning forks raised above a black background. You can turn it with your fingers on my guitar but it doesn't come off
- you can also see in the picture that the Yamaha brand name appears on the neck plate. This is also chrome and black but is a stamping not a casting. And this isn't actually a neck plate because it doesn't hold the neck on. If you remove the four screws this plate comes off, you will then see the actual neck plate which has four larger screws holding the neck on. The neck plate has a rectangular "window" in it to allow you to access the truss rod through a hole through the body into the back of the neck.
- All three pickups are identical. They have adjustable pole piece screws. The black and silver areas that you see are actually the tops of the pickup bobbins themselves. The black and silver areas are covered by a domed clear plastic piece. I took the guitar apart a few years ago to give it a good cleaning. I found that the pickups are not held in place with springs at the height adjustment screws like normal pickups, but instead had a large foam rubber block under the body of each pickup.
The fretboard is quite thin. Thin enough that the side dots are actually located on the split line between the fretboard material and the wood of the neck. The guitar's serial number is stamped directly into the fretboard between two of the lower frets.
- Yamaha was obviously proud of this guitar, and put their name and logo all over it. Besides the Yamaha name on the tuning machines, it has the Yamaha decal and die cast logo on the headstock, the name and logo on the neck plate and the name and logo are molded into the bridge pickup ring between the two bridge pickups.
- The SG2 and SG3 were Yamaha's first electric guitar models, and finish details are amazing for a 1965 Japanese guitar. If I lay it down next to my Strat, the Strat looks like a bargain basement model by comparison. Later 1960s models in Yamaha's SG series have far cruder appointments.
- As was already noted, the bridge has roller saddles and each saddle is height adjustable. The bridge also has the normal coarse height adjustment screws on each end. There are two sheet metal springs on the ends of the bridge pinching the saddles together so they don't move side-to-side.
- The guitar shown here has either a metal or black plastic nut, mine is white plastic. There is, of course, a zero fret.
- The string tree is also a good quality chrome plated die casting, not a metal stamping like many guitars of the period.
- The main knobs are chrome-plated metal with plastic skirts. As for the roller controls, the mysterious 3rd thumbwheel nearest to the bridge pickup is a balance control for the two bridge pickups. This functions whether the slide switch is in the up or down position.
- The remaining two thumbwheels are just like their Fender counterparts; they're a volume control and a tone control that override the main volume and tone controls when the slide switch is in the up position.
Supposedly most of them were sold in Japan, and only a few were exported to the US.SG5
Yamaha
SG Series
SG-5
Japan
Available 1966 to 1971
Neck: Mahogany.
Fingerboard: Rosewood.
Number of Frets: 22.
Scale Length: 24 ¾ inches.
Options: Double Cutaway
Bolt-On Neck
Chrome Hardware
2 Volume Controls
2 Tone Controls
3-way Pickup Selector SwitchSG7
The 6-string Yamaha electric guitar made in 1966 / 22 frets / Gold plated knobs and tunes / Weight: 3.5 kg / The entire length: 103 cm / Color: Sunburst / The 3-way toggle switch is similar to the Mosrite Ventures model / A unique body shape / There is no other body shape like this one.
The SG7 was the first Yamaha electric guitar unleashed in 1966. Featuring a peculiar asymmetrical body with an elongated horn on the treble side and a hockey stick style headstock, the guitar was designed with the input of Japanese Eleki legend Takeshi Terauchi.
The SG7 was reissued in 2000 as the SGV300 in a range of finishes: Black, Canary Yellow, Metallic Red and Pearl Green. A deluxe SG800 model was also released in the same year. It’s become a modern surf classic.
Yamaha RGX and RGZ electric guitars series
The Yamaha RGX and RGZ electric guitars Series are manufactured by the Yamaha Corporation and bear a close resemblance to the Ibanez RG series, the Jackson Soloist and other "superstrat" enhanced copies of the Fender Stratocaster. These Taiwan-made instruments were introduced in 1987.RGX Series guitars often have 24 or more frets and a bolt-on neck. Some high-end models use a neck-through-body design. Some come with Yamaha active pickups, two single coils and one humbucker.
Most of these instruments were generally known as RGZ, including the RGZ820R, a custom plaid graphic model with two humbuckers and a Floyd Rose licensed locking tremolo, played by rock guitarist Blues Saraceno.
The RGX guitars were upgraded in 2003 with a 3D headstock sporting a 3+3 tuner layout and a piezo bridge option for acoustic-like tones. Famous endorsees of the RGX/RGZ guitars included Blues Saraceno and Ty Tabor of King's X, who got his namesake RGX-TT and RGX-TTD6 signature models in 2000.
1st RGX generation: 110, 211, 120D and 312
- RGX 110
Features one single Pickup: a humbucker, in the bridge. Its bridge was a non-licensed "Fender Synchronized tremolo"'s clone. It had 24 frets.
- RGX 120D
- RGX 211
- RGX 312
Specifications:
Original List Price: $429.00
Neck - single coil
Middle - single coil
Bridge - Humbucker
Construction:
- Alder Body
- Maple Neck
- Bubinga Fretboard
Nut width: 41mm
- Volume 250k
- Tone 250k with coil splitter
- 5way Selector
- Top mount input jack
- Bridge - Single locking Yamaha trem with fine tuners, based on the Floyd Rose tremolo system
- Fretboard - Bubinga
- Volume - 250k
- Tone - 250k with coil splitter
- 5way Selector -
- Neck - single coil
- Middle - single coil
- Bridge - Humbucker
- 24 frets
Original List Price: $449.00
Neck - single coil
Middle - single coil
Bridge - Humbucker
Construction:
- Alder Body
- Satin Finish Maple Neck
- Bubinga Fretboard
Nut width: 43mm
- Volume 250k
- Tone 250k with coil splitter
- 5way Selector
- Top mount input jack
2nd RGX generation: 603a, 603s, 610m, 611m, and 612s (1987–1990)
All of these guitars have in common: a Basswood body, black Hardware, double locking tremolo system, 24 fret neck, a half-painted headstock, 24 3/4" scale, and recessed input jack.- RGX 603a
- RGX 603s
- RGX 610m
- RGX 611m
RM-Pro vibrato system with pitch rise adjustment.
Height-adjustable locking nut.
S-H pickup configuration, with angled neck single coil.
3-way pickup selector switch w/ coil tap and three way tone switch.
Single 250k volume pot.
- '''RGX 612s'''
3rd RGX generation
- RGX 120 D
- RGX 121 D
- RGX-420 DZ
- RGX 421 D
- RGX 621 D
The RGX 621D had a Yamaha height-adjustable locking nut. This allowed players to customize the action and feel of their guitar based on playing style and string gauge preference.
The body was alder. The neck was maple, with 24 fret rosewood fingerboard.
Pickups were two humbuckers and one single coil. The controls were a five position pickup selector and master volume and master tone controls.
The bridge was a TRS-Pro locking tremolo. All hardware was black chrome finished.
Finish options were Antique Sunburst Satin, Black, Blue Metallic, Red Metallic and Natural Satin
- RGX 820 R
- RGX 821
The RGX 821D had a Yamaha height-adjustable locking nut. This allowed players to customize the action and feel of their guitar based on playing style and string gauge preference.
The body was alder with figured Veneer. The neck was maple, with 24 fret rosewood fingerboard.
Pickups were two humbuckers and one single coil. The controls were a five position pickup selector and master volume and master tone controls.
The bridge was a TRS-Pro locking tremolo. All hardware was gold plated.
Finish options were Antique Sunburst, Black Burst, Faded Blue and Violet Burst.
4th RGX generation: the series at the 2000s
- RGX 121 S
- RGX 420 S
;Features and specifications
- Body - alder or ash
- Neck - maple
- Bridge - traditional fulcrum or Floyd Rose-licensed locking vibrato
- Pickups - two Alnico humbuckers
- Frets - 24 jumbo
- Colors: Flat Black, Shelby Blue, Dark Grey Satin, Blood Red
- RGX 420 SD6
- RGX 320FZ
- RGX 520FZ
RGZ Guitar Series
RGZ 112PA typical fat strat, this guitar features H-S-S pick-up configuration and had a 22-fret, and a non-licensed "Fender Synchronized tremolo"'s bridge. Body with a Fender-style plastic pickguard.RGZ 321P
HSH pick-up configuration, alder body, 24-fret neck, and TRS-101 locking tremolo. RGZ 611M
Dates of manufacture: 1989 - 1991
The Yamaha 611M was a superstrat style electric with an alder body and bolt-on maple neck. It had a 24 fret maple
fingerboard with black dot inlays. The lower part of the headstock was carved. It had superstrat style hardware finished in black, including a double locking Yamaha RM-Pro II tremolo system. Pickups were a diagonally mounted single coil at the neck and a humbucker at the bridge. Controls were a single volume knob, three-way pickup switch, coil splitter, two mini switches for the pickups. It came in red, black, white or yellow colors.RGZ 612PRGZ 612PLRGZ CustomRGZ CustomRGZ-211MRGZ-621
- '''RGZ-820R'''
Pacifica Guitar Series
First launched in 1990, the Yamaha Pacifica series was driven by the California session scene of the day-where versatility, performance and individuality were key. The series has become one of the company’s best-selling entry-level electric guitars.- notable models- Pac- 012,112J,112VPAC 1511 MS MIKE STERN SIGNATURE MODELPacifica PAC611HFM / Pacifica PAC611VFM Pacifica 612V
- '''Pacifica USA 1'''