Biu said:Jesus played a Gibson, remember?
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butnut said:I have a Japan Epi LP and it's made as good as my 70's Gibby LP. Long tennon neck joint and flawless finish. I got it from Wattage who upgraded the electronics and Duncan pups. It rocks...maybe even better than some new Gibsons.The stock tuners hold just fine too.
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Robert S. said:Poor string winding, old strings and crusty nut slots are more often the causes of a guitar falling out of tune than the tuners or even the guitars brand. A poorly intonated bridge in the hands of an unexperienced player is also an issue. Often a player will tune an "out" string in a chord and then chase the problem string to string.
With a basic set-up Epis tune and hold intonation just fine.
Happy Dude said:hmm, I will have to make or find a thread about this sometime, I am interested in learning more about the nut slots and bridge intonations since my epi lp guitar goes out of tune easily. But I think my setup is a little different since I tune my guitar 1/2 step down or tune it to D; instead of E. I am pretty sure it is the tuners, so maybe there is a way to make the existing tuners better without replacing?
HamerPlyr said:"It is a poor craftsman who blames his tools".
Bludave said:Epihones WERE really good guitars before Gibson bought them. Back in the 40's, 50, and early 60's they made guitars that were virtually made by hand. I recently played a Acrchtop made in 1946 that was awsome. It played and sounded great. Bottom line ALL that Gibson retained of the Epiphone line was the name. Now they are made in Korea. What a shame
Jimbojsr said:*adds his name to the "Epiphones Are Actually Pretty Cool" list.
The Gibson made Epiphones were made right in the Gibson plant. There's some really nice guitars there. The early Japanese Epiphones were nowhere near decent and were a good way off from mediocre. They did make Epiphones in the US for a while in the 80's. OK guitars.Luke Duke said:By saying virtually made by hand I'm guessing that you are meaning no machines because for a long time they were made my hand after even, Gibson bought Epi in the 50's they continued to be good instruments until they were shipped overseas and turned into massed produced decent/mediocre instruments.
Luke
How many of these guitars have you owned/played? There are really bad Gibsons out there too, I can't believe ALL the early Japanese Epi's were bad...The Golden Boy said:. The early Japanese Epiphones were nowhere near decent and were a good way off from mediocre. They did make Epiphones in the US for a while in the 80's. OK guitars.
Luke Duke said:By saying virtually made by hand I'm guessing that you are meaning no machines because for a long time they were made my hand after even, Gibson bought Epi in the 50's they continued to be good instruments until they were shipped overseas and turned into massed produced decent/mediocre instruments.
Luke