Thanks J D. The GFI fingers on Ultra and Expo (what I bought) are stainless steel. Bob said the markings happened while the slots (I guess for the string ball end) were being cutJ D Sauser wrote: 24 May 2025 1:47 pm Looking at these pictures of the OP (D. Scheindlin) I first wondered if they'd really used potmetal fingers like Sho-Bud used in later models, much to the displeasure of most owners, may I add.
But then, Micah's pictures seem to suggest that they are CNC milled from some material which can chip.
I could take Micah's but I must join the sentiment here, that D. Scheindlin's "New" PSG's fingers don't even look used, because the random marks and uneven indentations which seem to have been polished over are not something we've seen on even a bandstand workhorse from 50 years ago.
Again, the marks are a-typical of any manufacturing process I would know, unless someone would go about making fingers our of some scrap material with a hack saw and a rough file (and maybe even a little hammer to give it that final "touch") by hand one by one.
Now, in both cases, I doubt that it will audibly affect the tone. I for one, just posted recently that I don't find mirror polished changer-finger surfaces desirable because it allows string to move sideways on typically a 1/4" behind the tangent point... a phenomenon I feel sucks dynamics and sustain out the strings vibrating energy and may only "return the favor" by feeding buzz-noises into the mix.
That being said, were this the NEW guitar I would unpack with excitement and anticipation on my front porch... it'd be disappointed and would most likely return it for a refund and look for more satisfaction elsewhere.
I brakes my heart to see this not only feeling for the customers, but I have the highest of respects for Gene Fields long history of innovations. While I was never attracted to the cosmetic design of the GFI, I've inspected many at shows Decades ago, and never seem to have seen anything but a mechanically precise and well machined instrument.
... J-D.
and the person doing the sawing didn’t realize until the batch was finished. That said, I think the bigger mistake was putting them on the guitar anyway.
I did consider just sending it back and requesting a refund. But I’ve played a lot of steels and GFI just fits me best, feels best to me. And they are well engineered and well made, and as mentioned, what happened with this one is certainly not typical of what comes out of their factory. Disappointing experience for sure, but I trust Bob to make things right.