Re: gibson dark fire
fuzzy wuzzy wrote:AD3THREE wrote:Your not compairing apples to apples. A 58' or a 59' Les Paul is something special and I'm sure they had lemons too. Today even VOS models your lucky if you get a solid piece of wood. Most of the guitars made today are 2 or 3 good pieces of wood glued together so it is one piece. To get a solid one piece of wood that big anymore is hard to come by. Plus everything was done by hand in those days. CNC Routers do everything now and then you have a belt sander polish off the rough edges. It would cost $10,000 to do a 59' model the way they did it back then. It is unrealistic. Also I doubt these parts are just going to fall apart during a show. Its more likely you'd change something and make sure it worked before you went to the gig.
A 58 or 59 les paul LEMON!!!??? Nope, never heard of it, but if you should come accross one I'd be interested in buying it from you ( of course at the lemon rate).
Pots and solder,
fuzzy
________________________________________________________"Failed Muscian" Brian Farmer the guitar tech and his T shirt
Editz=speeling
You'll never find a lemon for a lemon price with les pauls. Even though they do exist everybody seems to think they're great because they're old and their hero's like Clapton played it. Just because its old now doesn't mean a darn thing. It just means its old and people want it. Remember these guitars were old a few years old in the sixties. I've never played a real 59' les paul and I'm sure I'd pee my pants just to hold it, but I stand by what I said earlier. Gibson did and still makes lemons every now and then. Its fact. I've even read that the guitars of today are not only more advanced in electronics (as far as building them) they also generally can play better because they hold tighter specs the guitars of the 50's. Also its like this. They make tons of guitars these days even the robots. The original 59' les pauls were less then 500 if I'm not mistaken and thats not even counting if they all made it or not. So even a lemon would be worth a ton of money to a collector. As for me my now discontinued Les Paul Classic 1960's plain top is more then enough les paul for me. And yes I've rewired it so its lost its resale value.
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Why do you keep talking about resale. If you keep the origianl parts and put it back wouldn't you be even? As for a lemon. Give it to me and I'll have it playing like a dream. Oh and just because they are old. No there was something special about that year for Pauls. Selection of wood, the construction, etc... Thats what makes them expensive too. Why is it called the holy grail of Pauls? Because of what was produced out of that shop during 1959, something special.