Jump to content
Gibson Brands Forums

fortyearspickn

All Access
  • Posts

    7,053
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    42

Posts posted by fortyearspickn

  1. Great song choice, singing and playing.  You've obviously not lost your 'acoustic touch'.  Both hands doing what they need to without thinking about it !!      

  2. Assuming the price difference is not part of your consideration, and not knowing if this is going to be your one and only, "forever' guitar - or just one you'll likely move on later, hoping to not lose money ....    I would go with the Custom Shop.   I would guess there are 100 'standards out there for every CS  - and that there is a little more attention to detail  when they are building them.    Full Disclosure - I have a J45CS and absolutely love it. 

    • Like 1
  3. Before we moved to San Antonio - my LG1 needed a fret job and I wanted advice on replacing the plastic bridge, and if so - then the bridge plate. 

    Several recommendations from guitar shop staff led to a good guy who did a good job on the frets, but suggested  leaving the bridge alone -  "If it's not broken, don't fix it."

    His shop was in a  Shed in his back yard.   He had guitars he was building in various stages of completion.  But I wouldnt say he was an actual 'luthier'.   I think there's a world of difference between some tasks and others.  Fret leveling, tweaking a truss rod, even re-gluing braces.  But replacing/resetting a bridge /bridge plate -   I think would require more vetting of the 'luthier'.    I  reattached the bridge on my wife's old Harmony.  Not pretty, but it's still firmly attached 20 years later.  

  4. I'm sure this already great sounding guitar will rise to stellar heights once you tweak it, and it warms up !   You're right - probably no insulation.  We had a house in Central Mass built in 1917 - had stucco outside, plaster inside with NEWSPAPER 'insulation' in between.  Needless to say, it was old and deteriorated. 

  5. I spent sometime researching different characteristics of wood 15 years back when we were having our carpet replaced with wood. Chose cherry, which is pretty hard and affordable.  Caused me to start looking at tone woods from the perspective of 'wood experts', not just  guitar wood experts.   ...  sort of a rabbit hole.  

  6. For a few years, my Lionel would stop.  I couldn't figure out why.  When I got older, and not inclined to run the train ad nauseam around the Christmas tree - my father finally told me the reason they stopped -  tinsel falling across the track shorted out the  current going to the locomotive.    First, it was Santa Clause, the tinsel was the final straw ! 

    • Like 1
  7. Since the J45 and the Southern Jumbo are very, very similar - given the ridiculous secret code system Gibson uses and changes to designate models - I'd not be concerned about this discrepancy.   Assuming you've eliminated all the usual clues re. fakes - like 3 screw truss rod covers.   G'Luck. 

  8. I'm guessing the small amount of oil in most of our fingers most of the time is all the wood really needs.  Especially if you don't wash your hands after eating fried chicken.  

  9. 1 hour ago, Murph said:

    He probably won't be preparing food on his fretboard.

    The lemon oil is fine, mine is Gibson brand.

    Coconut oil smells like coconuts.

    Which is stinky...

    Yep - I used Lemon Oil for decades with no problem.  The key is to use it sparingly - not too much and not too often.    I just figured pros  who beat the h3!j out of natural wood cutting boards  would be worth listening to. 

    • Like 1
  10. KR,  I’d try to get that Lemon oil off. It is petroleum  based with an artificial lemon scent to mask the scent.   Coconut Oil is a 100% natural product recommended by manufacturers of cutting boards.  

  11. A few years ago, I was trying to learn to throw a ball accurately with my left/non-dominant hand - playing fetch with the dogs - because my right shoulder was not 100%.   I googled/researched  Baseball players who were pitchers in the Majors who could throw, PITCH, with either arm.  As I recall there were only 2 or 3.    But, it is clear, you can learn to do anything with your non-dominant hand that you could with your dominant.  Switch hitters and ambidexterous folks prove it.  Although, teachers tried to force children learning to right to Only use their right hand.  Maybe because all the pencils were righties.   

    The 5 string banjo requires much more hammering on, pulling off,  sliding and bending.  I'd guess some songs/players generate 15% of the 'notes' with their left hand.  I wonder if you are a better player, the more your brain is wired towards being ambidexterous?   But, obviously, it's a different animal.

    • Like 1
  12. Funny how we progress over the years.   Start out as newbies frustrated with hurting fingers and buzzing notes, learning to tune without electronic tuners... .  Then we get to the next level where we can play cowboy chords, maybe even read music.  Then, hopefully an awakening - where we can enjoy our own music.  Those who don't get there - quit, probably more than half who pick up a guitar. Then we might gig with others or join a group or even perform....  Finally, where I am and some here on this thread,  re-discovering the joy of finding a new song and learning it from scratch.  And just plain simple 'noodling'.   To answer the classic question posed here occasionally:  "How many guitars do you need?"    When you've reached the peak, your peak, this peak, I think only one good one you can truly bond with.  Like your friend - that old Labrador Retriever.   With fond memories for the Pit Bull guitars you had decades ago - you remember  Music is to be experienced,  not just heard.  

    • Upvote 1
  13. 14 hours ago, Buc McMaster said:

     Sheesh.  First world problems.

    If this is one of those  "If you could only have one guitar..."   First World Problems,  I agree wholeheartedly with Anne.   "Pick Me"  Pick Me  (Shrek reference).... the 185 will give you more depth of tone choices, playing styles than a J45.   My 'opinion'  is based on years with a J-45 Custom  and and an SJ200.    Assuming the 185's b/s  are maple.   

    Or to put it this way -   if there were a fire here - I'd grab my SJ200 first.  

     He who hesitates ...  

    • Like 1
  14. 1 hour ago, Sgt. Pepper said:

    When I was in Dom Rep I lived off Presidente beer. A burrito in Dom Rep? Did you forget you were in the Caribbean and not in Mexico?

    I’ve been to Porta Plata twice and Santa Domingo (The Capital) twice as well. S D was much better.

    I’m in Michigan right now. When I get home I can post pics from 3rd World countries and I’m sure I have pics with cars in the background. I do have one of a guy and a donkey with a cart. I took it while having a beer.

    Yep - Cabarete - a small town 10 miles East of Porta Plata.  Nice week - winter as I recall.  Got some nice  pieces of amber.  

  15. Gibson should have also hired a guy from Sherwin Williams.  They come up with all sorts of cool color names.   Rose Brocade... Dutch Tile Blue... Pineapple Cream... Tequila Sunrise....Oh, wait.

  16. 21 hours ago, Sgt. Pepper said:

    I swear I’ve been to several 3rd world countries and could swear I saw cars driving around. I never once called Donkey Uber for a lift.

    Um . . . Pedro were you aware you and your burro were exceeding the 10 mph donkey/burro/mule speed limit? It’s the Tijuana prison for you. 

    Hyperbole.   Yep. No burritos in the Dominican when I was there a decade ago -  breakfast or otherwise.  But 90% of the vehicles were mopeds.  Men load their wife and three kids on them..  And use their moped, or motorcycle if lucky -  to move their refrigerator to their new home.   Mexico, of course, being proximate to the US, has a lot of cars.  Most with the VINS scratched off.   Never been ashore in Cuba - but they have a lot of nice US Classics from a time warp circa 1950s from the videos I've seen.  Point being - none of those cultures pay much attention to traffic laws.  And we're starting to move in that direction. 

×
×
  • Create New...