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Gibson L48 or L50


jbass

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Hello,

 

Need help to determine if I have a Gibson L48 or L50 and what year. I have read a lot of previous forum posts to educate myself but would like some more feedback from the experts. See pics attached. Here is what info I have so far:

FON 1232 C with red pencil 45

Archtop 16" Flat back w F holes/ Dot fingerboard / "Fleur de Lis" Gibson headstock logo /

Not sure if spruce, mahogany, laminated etc

See pic of interior bracing

Grover tuning pegs

Raised diamond tailpiece crossbar.

post-71261-062881100 1427139369_thumb.jpg

post-71261-044503600 1427139245_thumb.jpg

post-71261-070858600 1427139257_thumb.jpg

post-71261-007059400 1427139276_thumb.jpg

post-71261-043964500 1427139292_thumb.jpg

post-71261-011023100 1427139328_thumb.jpg

post-71261-083503400 1427139353_thumb.jpg

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I'm going to guess a 1937 L50. I see some published info that claims the C means 1937. The L48 wasn't made yet. Besides, I've never seen an L48 with an inlaid logo. Actually most L50s have only a decal but where this is an early one it could be different. I know around 1936/37 they were a 16" with a flat back...not sure when they went to an arched back but I'm betting not long after yours.

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Yes, "C" denotes a mfg date of 1937. The small script logo is also proper for this era. As the L-48 was not introduced until after WWII, and the 16" L-50 came out in 1936, as the "budget" model "Grand Auditorium" size guitar.

 

The best I can determine from the info furnished, as did KSD, is ... 1937 L-50.

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Yes, "C" denotes a mfg date of 1937. The small script logo is also proper for this era. As the L-48 was not introduced until after WWII, and the 16" L-50 came out in 1936, as the "budget" model "Grand Auditorium" size guitar.

 

The best I can determine from the info furnished, as did KSD, is ... 1937 L-50.

 

 

Thanks L5Larry and KSD for your expertise!

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Archtop 16" Flat back w F holes/ Dot fingerboard / "Fleur de Lis" Gibson headstock logo /...

That early headstock logo (as Larry references) is known as a "script" logo.

 

Gibson has used a fleur de lis central headstock inlay on quite a variety of guitar, lap steel, mandolin, banjo (etc) models over the years, but never on an L-50.

 

gibson_1918_head.jpg45U-1139_headstock-front.jpg185U-397_headstock-front.jpg09-02.jpg103300-2.jpg45U-1328_headstock-front.jpg45U-1328_headstock-back.jpg

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That early headstock logo (as Larry references) is known as a "script" logo.

 

Gibson has used a fleur de lis central headstock inlay on quite a variety of guitar, lap steel, mandolin, banjo (etc) models over the years, but never on an L-50.

 

gibson_1918_head.jpg45U-1139_headstock-front.jpg185U-397_headstock-front.jpg09-02.jpg103300-2.jpg45U-1328_headstock-front.jpg45U-1328_headstock-back.jpg

 

 

Thanks for the clarification. I had seen this term used "loosely" in my research.

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