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BoSoxBiker

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Posts posted by BoSoxBiker

  1. 42 minutes ago, Leonard McCoy said:

    For some reason, and I can't exactly pinpoint why, single-coil pickups are much more pleasant to my ears as well. I have had a superb Les Paul Standard but I have always found the Burstbuckers a bit too harsh-sounding. I don't play much electrics these days, hence I sold my 2004 Fender American Stratocaster Deluxe 50th Anniversary. I like Gibson's P-90 a lot, which is why I got a Gibson Les Paul Special in TV-yellow, instead, just for the occassional electric ride.

    O0H1b5Q.jpg

    CAKGEc6.jpg

    I agree. P-90's are fantastic. Such a solid signal for a single coil. I had two cheapos that I sold to help fund other things, but a P-90 guitar will happen again.

  2. 9 hours ago, Sevendaymelee said:

    When it comes to electrics, I favor single coil Strats. They're more clear, cut better, have more dynamics etc. But you gotta have a humbucker if you want to do anything even remotely aggressive like say, Soundgarden, Nirvana, Alice in Chains or Guns N Roses. I've tried single coils to play that sort of music and it just farts out the entire time. Too thin. So imo, you really need two different guitars if you're into rock music. 

    I'm a Tele guy, myself. A Broadcaster, actually, with the 1951 wiring. Led Zeppelin to Keith Richards to Country Twang. I sold my USA Strat and USA Tele and other items to fund. I need to take some of my own pics. For now, one from the online store.

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    • Like 1
  3. Nice! I still get warm fuzzies every time it comes out to play. The recording does very well to tell you what it feels like behind one of these HC RW SJ-200's. That rolling rumble thing is awesome. I remember when mine started doing that about a year ago. The maple Standard I had for a while did something like that, too, but was a little thicker on the bottom and snappier at the top. So much fun either way.

    Thanks for posting, JCV.

    • Like 1
  4. 36 minutes ago, Twang Gang said:

    Here is a pristine J200 at probably the best price you will find anywhere.  Ron will ship it to you and if you are outside of North Carolina I believe there will be no sales tax.  

    2018 Gibson SJ-200 Sunburst From Ron's Pickin' Parlor (ronspickinparlor.com)

    The guitar was built in Bozeman in 2018.  I bought it new in 2019 and traded to Ron in 2020.  I never gigged it, it was only out of my house once for a trip to a recording studio.  It is a wonderfully mellow sounding guitar with a Baggs Anthem pickup system and beautiful burst.  I just couldn't get along with the long scale neck and jumbo body so traded it to Ron.

    Ron is a great guy but his shop is very out of the way and he is up in bluegrass country.  He sells mostly Martin and Collings guitars as well as banjos and fiddles.  So the people that come into his shop just aren't thinking about buying a Gibson.  This is probably the best kept secret in the country, the guitar is like new and a very reasonable price.  If you are serious about wanting one you shouldn't pass this one by.

    The Standard I had was a 2018, too. I had almost forgotten how bright that rear burst was until I saw those pics.

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  5. 26 minutes ago, Brucebubs said:

    I have a 2020 Custom Shop Historic 1957 SJ-200 in Vintage Sunburst.

    I was comparing it against the SJ-200 Original the other day.

    H7uH0Rqh.jpg

    Not a huge difference - the Historic has a 'Thermally Aged' top, bone bridge pins, hide glue construction, casted pickguard , thin VOS finish and period correct hard case.

    The Original has a UST pick up system.

    $1200 difference - whilst I'm super happy with my guitar I think the similar looking Original might just be the sweet spot in the model line up.

    lGP7Iqgh.jpg

    I dunno.....  the baked top thing and that finish sure is is nice. I've got three Gibson baked tops and even the one I despised when I got it is starting to make the grade. There is something special about them.

    That said, I really dig the Original going with bone nut & Saddle and the 4 piece bridge inlay. There is a LOT to like.

  6. My favorite description is "Angry Cicada".

    Years ago, I somehow got a Cicada to rest on a badminton racket and flung it across the yard lacrosse-style. It made the most gawd-awful loud buzzing pi$$ed off, petulant mid-range sound I have ever heard in my life.  So, "Angry Cicada" is how I describe the first 3 months of that baked adi J-45 before settling down with some Sunbeams.

  7. The ways companies think about CS and customer satisfaction can be extreme. Some CFO decides that it's an area to save $$$ and the whole corporate paradigm changes from good CS to stop the bleeding. A Marketing head gets too much negative feedback from focus groups and crabby dealers beats his fist into the table 5 years later and all of a sudden policy changes to extreme flexibility to stop losing sales.

    It's not too hard to imagine the reputations both companies had 10 years ago having big influences on current day policy. Gibson balanced out their negative reputation by making sure if something did happen, it got fixed - one way or another. Martin's rep was far better. Theirs was to stop the $$ leak.

    Remember how bad Chrysler was at one point? Lee Iococca came up with that massive warranty to help balance out the negative sentiment with a piece of mind.

    I'm not claiming any company did or did not deserve the reputations or lingering common perceptions.

  8. Two out of three of my 2020-2021 guitars came with the humidipacks. Can't remember which one did not. 

    Yes, stay on CS. Perhaps get the dealer more involved. Their response times can be maddening. They are effective. Just maddening to deal with.

    Edit: for what it's worth, my most recent went to a local shop to have some playability concerns as well as a bunch of glue/buffer cleanup around the nut and bridge.

  9. We have our winter-heat dry season here. 36-38% RH. I think mine like being around 45%. Summer times is a struggle to keep below 58-60%. Late November rolls around and they all get sweeter sounding. Humidipacks help. It seems like I only get a couple months a year where I could leave them out for an extended period.

    Anyhow, don't you just love the way an SJ-200 engulfs you when it's rolling along to some nice strumming? One can feel the rumble with ease. No way to capture that with a mic, but the sound itself can be heard. That feeling, though. Nice!

    • Like 1
  10. 1 hour ago, E-minor7 said:

    ReHey - No need to explain why you over time must have them both.                                                                                                                                                              Ultra serious here. To switch between Martin and Gibson is an undiminished pleasure in this temple. 

    Indeed! I was thinking along the same lines, though I was lacking in the eloquence department.

    And congrats to pimousso for scoring a gibbo! Is there a thread with pics I missed?

    differentsky, this is definitely not a buyer's market right now. There have been some interesting used prices lately, and that's saying something given last year's market. Good luck with your search.

    • Like 1
  11. It's been a couple of years since I've watched any of them, but some of the promotional videos had some generalized verbiage that might have had a hint or two for whatever it is you might be hunting for.

    There may be some detailed knowledge in these forum pages over the years as folks with fine vintage examples have examined theirs versus new re-issues and historic collections. Some have even sent their vintage guitars in to Gibson per Gibson's request to be x-rayed in efforts to copy the old ways or to at see how they ticked.

  12. On 1/12/2022 at 4:28 PM, paul300 said:

    Hmm did you have the chance to play them?

    i would say 50s is a more safe choice. I had a so/so experience with my j45TV wasn’t too crazy about the non aged Adirondack top and heard quite some comments from people trying strings over and over to get their Adi guitars sound softer and fuller.

    For my HC 1942 Banner J-45, my thoughts echo those you have heard on going through strings for a softer and fuller sound. Mine was also a new build, which others here have suggested as another aspect to consider. The baked adi on my HC Pre-War SJ-200 with RW B&S was sweet sounding the day it was delivered and got sweeter and sweeter in the 18 months I've had it.

    • Like 1
  13. On 1/21/2022 at 9:51 AM, Dash_Starkiller said:

    Appreciate it. It helped I couldn’t sleep haha. And it was a risk to put in an offer at what I felt was already a good price but hey, gotta try right. I’ve never tried sunbeams…

    It will be interesting to see if I switch over to a brighter string a few years from now if mine continues to simmer down. It's sound projection is impressive, though.

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