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cdntac

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Posts posted by cdntac

  1. My Byrdland does does the same thing --- though just a tiny bit.

     

    I took a small piece of black wet/dry 1500 grit sandpaper, folded it over a few times and forced it between the pickup ring and the pickup. You can't see it, it fits snug and the vibrations stopped.

     

    Granted, the vibrations were only heard acoustically --- not through an amp.

  2.  

     

    Roger, don't think about laminated vs carved. Think about spruce vs maple. They have different grain patterns. It appears to have the vertical striated pattern of spruce, although I'm less certain on this point than the others.

     

    At one point in the vid I thought it almost looked like a two-piece top. I thought I could quite clearly see a line running through the two pickups and into the tailpiece.

     

    It certainly looks like a spruce top to me.

  3. Okay, I see what you're saying, but the only way the actual pickup (humbucker) could be against the end of the fingerboard is if the mounting ring had been cut through, so in that sense there's almost always going to be the type of gap you're referring to.

     

     

     

    I don't know if it would have to be cut or not since the fingerboard does overhang a bit at its end (therefore the binding could quite possibly touch the binding) but nonetheless that's a moot point.

     

    For some reason there is a difference in spacing between the binding at the pointy end of the fingerboard and the neck pickup on some Byrds. I know that the newer Byrds have a different length neck tenon but that's not going to cause this discrepancy.

     

    From the large pics I have on my Mac it appears that the '61 and '64 of Ted's are closer than the '66, '67, '03 and my '68.

  4. By "gap" I meant to the actual pickup. Sorry for the confusion.

     

    One would think that all Byrds would be the same. I doubt that Les Paul pickup/neck distances vary. Even though all the Byrds in the above pics (except the white one) are from the '60s, there's no way that there would be mistakes (and I'm hesitant to use the word "mistakes") would be made in regards to the pickup positioning.

     

    It's very strange.....

     

    The white 2003 Byrd is a normal Byrdland --- just painted white. It's starting to get some major lacquer checking.

  5. I haven't researched it, but I just looked at a bunch of photos of Byrdlands from different periods, and every one of them had the neck pickup right up against the end of the fingerboard. Maybe not all are like this, but it would seem that most are. Maybe you could post some pics, do more searches, and report back. Seems like a worthwhile thing to examine, if you find enough evidence.

     

    I think there are always going to be exceptions to every rule, though.

     

     

     

     

    The only close-up shots I have of Byrdlands are Nugent's and mine.

     

    In that Clapton pic and in the image that BigKahuna posted of the blonde Byrd it can be seen how the pointy end of the neck binding is overtop of the neck pickup ring and almost touching the pickup.

     

     

    104061098_el.jpg

     

    Eric%20Clapton%20Bangladesh.jpg

     

     

     

    But there does appear to be a slight variance in the distance on different Byrds.

     

    A few of Ted's:

     

    p406332609-3.jpg

     

    Ted_pickup_height-2.jpg

     

    byrdland3-1.jpg

     

    p541379212-5.jpg

     

    p150824812-5.jpg

     

     

     

    pickup_height.jpg

     

     

     

     

     

    Mine:

     

     

     

    byrd_front.jpg

  6. I'm going to post in this thread what I did in the Byrdland thread....

     

     

    I'm inclined to think ES-350 as well --- but due to another reason not stated: The lack of space between the neck pickup and the beginning of the neck.

     

    Here's a pic of a '59 ES-350 (note it has the fancier Byrdland-style trim at the last fret):

     

    http://www.300guitars.com/2011/09/1959-gibson-es-350-update/

     

    Note how the neck goes right up to the neck pickup?

     

    That doesn't occur on Byrdlands.

     

     

    ES-350-016-1024x768.jpg

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