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Limited Edition Riviera Custom P93 (Wine Red)


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NAME:

 

Epiphone Limited Edition Riviera Custom P93

 

PRICE:

 

$450 on sale with Epiphone Hardshell case included

 

PURCHASED FROM:

 

Musician's Friend

 

FEATURES:

 

Body Wood: Laminated Maple

Top wood: Laminated Maple

Scale Length: 24-3/4"

Neck Joint: Glued In

Neck Wood: Mahogany

Fretboard: Bound rosewood w/ parallelogram inlays

Neck Shape: C

Frets: 22

Nut Width: 1.68"

Fretboard Radius: 12"

Finish: Wine Red

Hardware: Gold

Bridge: LockTone Tune-O-Matic

Tailpiece: Bigsby

Pickups: 3 Alnico-V P-90 dog-ear single-coil

Tuners: Grover

 

 

FIT AND FINISH:

 

This guitar is beautiful. The wine red finish with the gold hardware work perfectly together. However, there were some flaws on mine. There was a small bit of paint on the fretboard binding at the very end of the fretboard next to the neck pickup. Also, the black paint on the inside of the top f-hole looks a little sloppy. Needless to say, these are very minor flaws and definitely not anything that would make me want to return the guitar. The set up "out of the box" is one of the best I've seen. Action was perfect. The only changing I did was a new set of strings and conditioning the fretboard, oh and I removed the black toggle switch tip and replaced it with a white one purely for cosmetic reasons. The tuners are stable, the guitar stays in tune, even when the Bigsby is used.

 

This thing just feels like a quality instrument. That's the best way I can describe it. I am a big fan of hollow/semi-hollow bodies and the body of this guitar feels like it was made for me. My favorite aspect of the guitar is the "C-Shaped" neck. One of the most comfortable necks I've played. My hands are kind of small so the neck might not be everyone's cup of tea, but for me it's perfect.

 

SOUND QUALITY:

 

I've seen a lot of reviews about the P-90 pickups being "muddy". I guess they are a tad on the dark side, but they can easily be manipulated with raising the bridge and middle pickups and fiddling with the volume controls. Each pickup has it's own volume control and there is one master tone control. The middle pickup is always on in all positions with the three way toggle switch (toggle switch up- neck and middle pups, toggle switch middle- all three pups, toggle switch down- middle and bridge pups), but you can turn the middle pickup off completely by turning it's volume knob all the way down. To me it has a nice "warm" sound and I really like it. It sounds great clean and is also very nice with a little distortion. If you are wanting the P-90 bite that a Casino has, then DO NOT expect it from this guitar. It's a totally different animal with a unique sound that I really like.

 

RATING

 

I give this thing a solid 8 out of 10. I got an especially good deal on mine as it was $50 off the regular price and came with a free hardshell case, so I really lucked out. It's a great guitar for most all types of music besides metal. I would recommend this to anyone.

 

PICS (sorry about the glare and poor lighting)

 

P93onstand.jpg

P93dryneck.jpg

P93Full.jpg

P93Bigs.jpg

P93onbed.jpg

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Mine was 400.00 with a free case......It came flawless, and still is flawless....They are available in Goldtop and White......

 

Great guitar.....Very stable Bigsby...............

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Are they different pickups?

 

 

Well both guitars are listed as having "Alnico-V P-90's". The difference in the sound could be the fact the the Casino is a full hollowbody and the Riv is semi-hollow, maybe the pup covers are different, or even the wiring of the 3 pickup Riv might have something to do with it. Both are great sounding guitars, but each has a unique sound.

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Pickup covers are probably the bigger influence. I changed my Casino cover to black plastic ones (like the Riv) and the sound really "filled out", not quite as edgy (maybe the word). The body configuration and the Bigsby are going to contribute, too. I tried several of these before my Casino, but I don't use vibrato, so it won out. Still, I can't help but like the Riv.

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Outstanding! THANK YOU for taking the time to do this! [thumbup]

Right on target, and will help others once the review thread catches on.

I'm placing it in there immediately.

=D>=D>=D>

 

I have a review to do, myself - but it'll be a "Don't Buy this Guitar",

but I've deleted all my original at home photos. Trying to recover them.

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  • 1 year later...

I always get a little bit sad when someone resurrects one of these threads that have a post from animalfarm in them. I guess it's pretty cool though, because without him, no one would have started doing reviews in the first place. Someone should take over where Greg left off and continue to compile knowledge for all of us.

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I always get a little bit sad when someone resurrects one of these threads that have a post from animalfarm in them.

Very sad, that's for sure.

 

 

Someone should take over where Greg left off and continue to compile knowledge for all of us.

Not here though, just as likely to be unceremoniously dumped like last time.

 

The DIY still lives at Robin's Unofficial Epiphone Wiki, Animalfarm's DIY Links (now with Table of Contents) as does the Serial Number ID thread.

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Very sad, that's for sure.

 

 

Not here though, just as likely to be unceremoniously dumped like last time.

 

The DIY still lives at Robin's Unofficial Epiphone Wiki, Animalfarm's DIY Links (now with Table of Contents) as does the Serial Number ID thread.

And Sjael finished formatting the DIY section to the wiki when he installed the backup. Prior to that, I was only about half-way through the list.

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And Sjael finished formatting the DIY section to the wiki when he installed the backup. Prior to that, I was only about half-way through the list.

Props to both of you Rob, I think it's wonderful it's still alive. If you ever need the links checked, updated or added to just let me know mate.
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Props to both of you Rob, I think it's wonderful it's still alive. If you ever need the links checked, updated or added to just let me know mate.

I just might in the future. With all thats going on trying to get the wiki back up to speed, the DIY is going to be a little neglected for awhile. I'm just glad that Sjael got it to the point it is currently at.[thumbup]

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I also picked up one of these, only mine has a repaired neck. It goes to the luthier next month to see if he can adjust the neck without breaking the repair. I only paid $150 for it so I know that even if it breaks I can get the money back on the Bigsby, tuners, and pickups.

 

I put a set of Pyramid flat wound strings on there, which I have never played before, and got close to that classic Beatles tone, not quite a Casino, but close enough for most listeners.

 

Great compliment to my corral.

 

-Harry

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  • 2 years later...

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