“It’s a steal, but since it’s the only one, who knows how it might appreciate?” What do you get when a car designer builds a guitar? Our intrepid guitar hound goes in search of his next six-string oddity


Maybe I was born too late. I love anything that hearkens back to the post-industrial designs of the 1950s, including Airstream trailers, two-tone cars, Formica dinette tables, and the sci-fi imaginings that stylishly brought us into the space age.

This electric guitar, handbuilt by Jon Trickey and dubbed the Comet, pulls all of those things together into one snazzy build, Daddy-o! Trickey, a car designer, artist and sculptor from San Andreas, California, focused his love of the aforementioned time period on the creation of this Comet electric guitar, which, like all of his builds, is a one-of-a-kind one-off.

The guitar is distinguished by the strikingly exaggerated cutaways, the asymmetrical triangle of white mother-of-toilet seat Formica over grey woodgrain Formica, the salmon pink sides highlighted by tubular chrome tubed piping in place of traditional binding, the large headstock and the emblem from a 1964 Mercury Comet. All of these otherwise weird or unusual features come together to make a guitar that not only looks memorable but also plays and sounds great.

A photo showing a custom Jon Trickey Comet six-string electric guitar

(Image credit: May Yam)

Even though the 22-fret maple neck with a rosewood fingerboard is bolted on, the overall feel of the guitar is very much like a Gibson Firebird or an SG. I say that despite the Fender-like 25.5-inch scale length, which is three-quarters of an inch longer than a Firebird’s. Regardless, it plays great. The neck is narrow, with beautiful low action, and there is easy access to the upper frets for even the largest hands.



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Written by Lemon2021

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