One of my music videos

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Marina Revival Series FL-2 Electric Guitar




I bought this guitar in 1992 and I really haven't seen that many Marina Electric Guitars. The Revival Series FL-2 that I own is the only one I have ever seen although I have read one article referring to them. There is another guitar very similar known as the Marina Feeling Series FL-2. The only one of which I have seen for sale on Ebay. Apparently made in the 80s and very rare.

General My Marina Revival Series FL-2
The Marina Revival Series FL-2 that I own is a off white or cream coloured pearl (upon removing hardware I can see the colour has changed from white).
It has a shape similar to a stratocaster with no cut aways (basically a slab).
The trem is a strat style and it is loaded with two no brand humbuckers.
The neck is made of some sort of white timber as is the body and the finger board might be rosewood or some thing similar in colour. The neck has pearl dot inlays.

The Neck
The neck has had major work as it appeared that it has been planed flat due to a natural bow towards the excessive tension direction.
The finger board is thinner in the middle of the neck than on the ends.
In general around the finger board workmanship is a bit low.
But surprisingly the thing plays OK and can be tuned for intonation with only very minor discrepancies in pitch around the neck.

The Body
The body appears to be made of three pieces of timber of the same type white timber joined down the length of the body. It does not have a pick guard.
It basically is close to a silhouette of a strat but in a slab style with rounded edges. No cut aways for your body or right arm.
The Controls
It has a volume control and a tone with a three way switch.
The original nobs were black plastic strat style but I change them to chrome telecaster style nobs.
The three way switch allows one to switch from bridge to both to neck pickups.
Both control pots are 250K and for some reason the free end of the volume pot was not grounded so the volume could not be tuned down to no sound.

The Pickups
The pickups are humbuckers as said before. Constructed differently from what I normally see.
The steel slugs screw into the plastic former and not into the mounting plate. They are black in colour.
They are not branded.
The DC resistance is of them is as follows:
Bridge : 11.5k Ohms
Neck : 12.5k Ohms

Hardware
None of the hardware is brand name but seems to be of a reasonable quality. The machine heads are typical of electric guitars. The neck plate is is chrome with marina stamped into it.
The bridge is a strat style as I said before.

The Playing Experience
Surprisingly this thing plays quite well and I will not be selling it any time soon.
Other players often comment on the the sound and want to have a play of it. It has a warm tone with a lot of depth.
Action is reasonably low and it is enjoyable to play.

Any information about where this guitar was manufactured or any other information or web sites would be appreciated.
Please leave a comment if you know some thing.
More on the Marina Feeling Series FL-2
There seems to be a few subtle differences between these two guitars.
For one the bridge is different even though they both would perform almost identically. Also the volume and tone nobs differ to that of the Revival Series being that the Feeling Series featured here has Gibson style nobs and the originals on my Marina Revival Series were black strat style nobs.
Other than that the rest of the hardware is identical in appearance.
There seems to be a crack running away from the jack in the finish. This must be a common thing as mine also has cracks in this area.
Honestly after only ever seeing one of these for sixteen years it feels a bit strange to see another.
Marina Guitars
There is not a great deal of information about the company all I know is that these guitars were made in Korea around the late 80s and were aimed at the lower end of the market.