Yeah, Jon is right and I was the one who bought it. I later traded it for an other B-10 which is older but was in rougher shape and I had to rebuild (almost completed now).
Rickenbacker has no records whatsoever of when they started building them and how many were built. You can see some pictures of them in Loreen Ruymar's "Hawaiian Steel Guitar Book".
Every one I've seen is a little different. Only one thing is consistent: They used ONE neck casting (aluminum) that inserts like a bakelite neck into a B-8 body. Additional space for the longer pick-up (all I've seen are 1.5" wide, BTW!!) was milled into the body and the pick-up is suspended on the side plates.
But then, some have the later phillips screws and others the earlier knurled nuts.
Some have a bakelite bridge, some an aluminum bridge. Some have a chrome plated brass nut or an aluminum nut and others again even had a bakelite nut.
There are some with chrome plated plates others are white and I've even seen pictures of one that I would think was black.
SHORT, they were probably custom assembled, on order.
Many believe there were only "one or two" built. Not so. I have played two, I have talked to two other people that had one and someone even told me that Buddy Emmons has/had one too (?!?). And I have seen pictures of about five or six others. All this in about a year of research. So,I think that while they may only have built a few compared to how many of their "regular" B and BD guitars they've produced, it was more than just "one or two".
Both, my first one and the one I presently have, are excellent sounding instruments.
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jaydee@bellsouth.net