Had to glue every fret end down and then level the frets. Lowed the action a bunch, and now it plays like it looks - zoomy. Also, the binding nibs were vertical on the fret ends - like railroad ties. I beveled the binding so your thumb and fingers don't catch while playing. Just over a year old, and the nut had already been replaced by another guy here in town (he did a good job). Also, the truss rod cover was so thick it interfered with the strings. It's going back in the case. Shipping it this afternoon...
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On the bench - Banker Flying V
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I'm a bit confused. It doesn't look like a cheaply made guitar so why were so many things wrong with it? If it was a homebuilt guitar where they were fabricating most things from scratch you could understand it. But if a luthier actually built this their QC is crap.
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I've always hankered after a Flying V (and a long blonde wig).
But right now I can neither afford nor justify an Epiphone, let alone the $5000 string through body Gibson I really want.
People are asking crazy prices even for beat up examples too.
There's an Epiphone on GC for $400 that needs a repspray, at least, and a husk on eBay for $400 with a (badly) repaired headstock crack.
For that kind of money, I'd just buy the Epiphone one new, which is string-through and has a proper set neck (unlike previous years bolt-ons). Spend $650 on the Epi and another $200 on SD pickups and you've easily got as good an instrument as the $5000 Gibson, or just spend $1500 on the basic Gibson with the standard stop tail bridge.
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For those who don't remember, Banker is the first authorized Gibson custom shop maker.
And so far, I'm not impressed. The maker is a novice, but not an idiot. There are cosmetic glitches, and some lazy workmanship - but overall, it's not a horrible instrument. It plays nice now and sounds pretty good. The pickups are some boutique maker I never heard of.aka Chris Pile, formerly of Six String Fever
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Hate to hear that, That looks like a pretty old Banker -maybe it sat at CME for a while before purchase, Matt's guitar's coming out now are much better.
I've played a lot of the new ones before he sells distributes or sells them.Last edited by NegativeEase; 10-06-2021, 11:28 AM.“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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Originally posted by Little Pigbacon
If you could spend $650 on an Epi + $200 on
pickups and easily get an instrument as good as the $5,000 Gibson, why would you consider the $1,500 Gibson an option?
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Originally posted by Little Pigbacon
Call it badge snobbery or whatever you want, but I have really liked a lot of Gibsons in that price range.“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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Originally posted by Masta' C View Post
Why would anyone consider a $1500 Gibson an option?
I'd say here are 3 common reasons before even talking about the actual guitar- resale/investment value considerations.
- a prestige purchase (see worship player thread.... I kid I kid)
- fulfilling a daydream of one day owning a Gibson instead of an approximation or alternate.
“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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Originally posted by Little Pigbacon
I bought an Explorer for $1,260 on model-year clearance a few years ago. It is a brilliant guitar.
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Originally posted by Masta' C View Post
I was just jesting. I'd do an Explorer or Flying V any day. To be honest, the lower end of the Gibson range is where the value is. It's when you spend $3K+ only to realize that you got the same quality as a $1500 guitar that drives me nuts with Gibson.“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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Originally posted by ICTGoober View Post
If you go to the guys website you'd find that's what he used to be....“For me, when everything goes wrong – that’s when adventure starts.” Yvonne Chouinard
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