Thanks, freshmattyp. I'm always looking for reliable information.
It's amazing that Gretsches work as well as they do. Sometimes I think they tried to come up with features that were different without worrying over whether they were practical.
For example, the "tone switch" on the Country Gent. It allows you to select NO HF rolloff, SOME, or a LOT. Real useful! Or the "mute" switch. Just the thing to drive you nuts at the gig when you can't figure out why there's no sound. It was promoted as a way to preserve those elusive tonal settings...which were set by the 3-way switch! Pretty elusive, all right. Or the string mutes, which Chet Atkins detested (he had well-developed palm muting chops long before Gretsch entered his life). Or the rocking bridge, which guarantees your guitar will NEVER be in tune. And its patrician disregard for any strings smaller than .011s. When I first owned my Country Gent, I took off the pickguard and installed a Tune-o-Matic and generally tried to turn it into a Gibson, but eventually I realized that you had to approach the beast on its own terms and let it dictate how it wanted to be played, and it was restored to original.
Even so, it's still a killer git. I ignore the features I don't like, and love the sound of those old Filter'Trons [to give them the trademarked name]. Back in the day they kicked gluteus maximus through a Cry Baby wah. =sniff= nostalgia for old bygone times...