The Stratotone was a commercially successful family of solid body electric guitars which was produced from 1952 on. The headplate was adorned with a
note symbol styled as an atom. The name is a
compound of
stratosphere and
tone. This predates the use of the prefix "strato" in the naming of the
Fender Stratocaster by two years.
Stratotone H44 The Stratotone H44 was a "thin body" "Spanish electric" (i. e.
electric, as opposed to "Hawaiian electric"
lap steel guitars) single-
cutaway guitar with a "copper-bronze" finish. The single
single-coil pickup in a neck position came with tone and volume controls and a switch between "rhythm" and "lead" characteristics. The neck with a
rosewood fingerboard is 25 1/4" scale with 20
frets and the heel at the 14.th fret; it is a
neck-through design with added "ears" at the body, but without a
truss rod. It features a "fixed" (no-vibrato) trapeze tailpiece with a compensating bridge, which wasn't fixed to the body but held in place by the downward pressure of the strings. It was built 1952-7. A H44 was
Ritchie Valens' primary guitar. ==References==