Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

As to setups not being good right out of the box, yeah, I have no problem blaming the factory. :1: To a point anyway, though the dealer should certainly bear some responsibility as well.

They're new instruments. They haven't settled in, and have never been set up for a particular player's style. Still, from large production factories like Gibson, Martin, Fender, etc, they are never really set up that well before they are shipped out. Gibson certainly isn't particularly bad - I'd put them probably on par with many other mid-high level makers. Still, nut slots are never cut properly, and adjustments of truss rod, action, intonation, are generally held only to modestly loose tolerances.

I wouldn't blame much on shipping and handling, as guitars from makers like Collings, PRS, even Yamaha will come out of the box with a better setup after going through the same transit or climate shifts. Still, even a Collings that was set up perfectly at the factory can need a little tweaking by the time they reach their final destination. Gibsons aren't unusually bad, they just generally need a bit more final tweaking than some others.

And yes, ideally a dealer should have competent techs to inspect and set up every instrument that comes though, or tweak them a bit for the final owner upon purchase. There are a few good shops that do this, though most don't. The guitars just come off the truck, out of the box, and on the wall. Heck, when I was working with Elderly's, I'd say about 5-10% of the instruments we received we rejected and sent back to the factory or distributor. That number was already disproportionately low to reflect the market as a whole, because our buyers went to great lengths to weed out the makers that proved to show higher rates of defects. This means that I'd guess somewhere at least in the 10% range of guitars hanging in most stores should be written off as defective before they are even sold. Of the other 90-95% that stayed, it was very, very rare to find any that didn't need at least a bit of final adjustment to bring them up to our specs. As I said though, stores that pay attention to this level of detail are rather few and far between.

Most should come with "Some final assembly and adjustments required" stickers in my opinion, but I suppose that wouldn't help sales too much.
 
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Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Most should come with "Some final assembly and adjustments required" stickers in my opinion, but I suppose that wouldn't help sales too much.

Nope. My Fender Jaguar HH is a killer guitar. However, last summer i was in Tampa, and asked for one, since I was trying out amps. The Jaguar they handed me had a severely dry fretboard, it was really unattractive. The truss rod wasn't adjusted: the action was funny. Pickups were too low as well... Now, if the shop took the time to set that up and clean it up, I'm sure they wouldn't have even had it in stock.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Nope. My Fender Jaguar HH is a killer guitar. However, last summer i was in Tampa, and asked for one, since I was trying out amps. The Jaguar they handed me had a severely dry fretboard, it was really unattractive. The truss rod wasn't adjusted: the action was funny. Pickups were too low as well... Now, if the shop took the time to set that up and clean it up, I'm sure they wouldn't have even had it in stock.

Meanwhile they're probably convinced that Jaguars just don't sell :D
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

I'm gonna say +1 to Aceman's post. You gotta learn these "basic" skills for yourself.

Case in point, I took 2 guitars to a very well respected luthier in SoCal for some electronic work. When the guitar was returned to me, I noticed he did some adjustments to the set up. While the set up was nice, I think it was more set up the way HE liked it, not the way I like it or the way it was set up when given to him. Took it home and changed the settings back to the way I like it.

I think being able to identify where and why your guitars doesn't feel right to YOU is important. Even more important is being able to adjust it on your own to your preferences.

I'd only pay a luthier or a tech to perfom a task I wouldn't be able to do on my own.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

One shop I went to doesn't know a thing about guitars.
They had a Gibson robot guitar that just needed a battery recharge or something. When I looked at it, the robot tuners didn't work and the output of the guitar was weak.
I said " I think I need to try a different guitar" and the person says "Isn't that funny that even though it's the most expensive guitar in the store, no one thinks it sounds very good?"
I just replied "it's the electronics, you can fix that."
and she looks surprised for a second and then changes the subject.

making sure the guitar works is the first part of a setup and these guys aren't paying attention at all. no wonder that beautiful, beautiful guitar with a good unplugged tone, with a price tag of only around $1200, has been sitting there for 6 months or more.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Oh nothing better when an amateur "setup" their guitars.....
Anyways, almost all the Taylors we get are working out of the box, most Fender as well, Ibanez have their ups and downs, but mostly works well too....
Gibson we always have to work on, and it never fails.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

People think that Gibson’s come from the factory messed up or hastily thrown to together but most of the time that’s untrue. I have firsthand knowledge of this (I work for a Company that makes up a lot of Gibson’s business) and I’ve played a few Gibson’s that have come right off the final inspection line at the factory…they play just fine.

So “I” will say that the Gibson factory setup doesn’t suck but just like everything it’s up to personal preference.

Now here’s where the problem comes from…

Most people don’t understand how a guitar gets to them most of the time.

a. Guitar is made in a temperature and humidity controlled environment

b. Guitar is boxed up and leaves controlled environment

c. Guitar is man handled during shipping

d. Guitar sits at some DC for an unknown time and thrown around

e. Guitar is man handled again during shipping to retail outlet

f. Guitar is man handled during receiving at retail outlet warehouse

g. Guitar sits in retail outlet’s warehouse which is an uncontrolled temperature and humidity environment for an unknown time and thrown around

h. Guitar is put out on the Sales Floor which is an uncontrolled temperature and humidity environment for an unknown time and molested by a ton of people till you pick it up and assume that the Gibson Factory set up sucks

So what have we learned from this?

Movement, vibration, elevation, temperature, humidity & human interference affect a guitars factory setup. Wood and metal love to be effected by their environments and that’s why guitars are so adjustable in the first place, to compensate for environmental changes.

Well that explains why the only guitar I bought that I didn't have to mess with right out of the box was a Tele!
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Oh nothing better when an amateur "setup" their guitars.....
Anyways, almost all the Taylors we get are working out of the box, most Fender as well, Ibanez have their ups and downs, but mostly works well too....
Gibson we always have to work on, and it never fails.

The way you get to be a professional is by doing it - there has to be a first time. The more you do it - the better you get. No guitar tech will EVER spend the time it takes to get it right for YOU.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

definitely get the factory set-up details off the web and set it up yourself; in my opinion it favors heavier strings, but that could be because i'm a heavy-handed drunkard
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

No guitar tech will EVER spend the time it takes to get it right for YOU.
Aha....so that is why we are swamped in reps and setups here...because we do not talk to our customers, do not watch them play, do not hear what quirks the like and so on.....;)
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Ok...let's get our heads out of our arses.

Of all the Gibson QA issues, the factory setup isn't one of them IMO. It is, however, a GENERAL setup for general playing. It is not in any way shape or form tailored to anyones specific preferences in feel or tone.

As for paying for it...all you'l get is SOMEONE ELSE'S setup. The ONLY way to get the setup right is to do it yourself. Setting up a guitar is a highly personal thing - it takes some time and lot's of back and forth. Only you can make the decision if it is good, and NO TECH can do that without you in the room and trying the guitar every other tweek of a screw.

The money spent on a setup would be much more well spent on a book about how to do it. Heck - you can find out all yo need to know about:
Intonation
Bridge
Tailpiece
Action
Pup height
Truss

Right on these pages to do it as well as any tech - in fact BETTER for your personal prefences. It only takes a decent tuner, a couple of screw dirvers and truss tool, and a decent little ruler.

But after everything - I'll say this: Start with the guitar at FACTORY SPEC and go from there.

At the end of the day your fingers and ears have to make the final decision. for example - if you tap a lot....only you can decide how much buzz you will settle for against how low the action is.

Finally, some common sense. And to the original poster, maybe you should try a few Gibson's out before buying one. Why would you buy a guitar that did not feel right or had evident issues? I have not played a bad Gibson in YEARS and that one was an SG. Regarding final setup, if you play guitar, you should know or at least have some basic knowledge regarding setups, intonation and minor work like changing a nut or adjusting a truss rod. People who pay some tech to set up their guitars are IMO lazy, no offense to those that just choose not to learn basic guitar maintanance or may have the extra disposable money to pay someone else to do the work. Personally, I don't give a rats ass about a tech's reputation, no one touches my guitars but me. I took the time to learn proper setups and maintanance work. There is a certain satisfaction in it and I don't have to deal with how a guitar is miss handled when I am not there to see. Some techs actually smack the back or the neck prior to setting the truss rod :smash: and claim it stabalizes it :bsflag:
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

A cousin bought a new Gibson Les Paul Studio for very cheap, and the factory setup wasn't bad at all. Played very smoothly with no evident fret buzz. Light strings.

It was a good starting point, if anything. Far from atrocious.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

My experience is mixed- just like quality of the wood in a guitar (tonally)- Gibsons vary alot. I've bought some of the lesser expensive ones that had great nut/fretwork, and played beautifully, and some that were god awful. I've play some of the older pre-plek standards that were setup to a T with great fret/nutwork , and some that were god awful. The couple of newer Plek'ed instruments I've handled were setup extremely well.

But yeah, they get manhandled, beat around, stored poorly- and with the thinner Gibson finish, it usually ends up in more movement, and thus a crappier out of the box setup. Then you get people folling around with the TOMs at GC, tuning way down, etc without ever touching the truss rod-of course it's going to play like $hit.

If you are purchasing online- Sweetwater is tought to beat- thouse guys store the guitars in a temp/humidity controlled environment, and do a 55 point inspection/setup on guitars before they ship (on everything but the super cheapest guitars)- they do a really nice job too! MF/GC online, Sam Ash, and whatnot, don't do a thing over than ship a guitar to you.
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

Which is why I repeat my point that if you buy a guitar in the Gibson price range, any store worth spending your money at will offer you a personalized setup.

Acceptance of anything less is an insult in my opinion.

+100....

Lesson to be learned, when buying a high quality instrument, (anything 1500+ IMO but that's debatable) buy from a high quality shop...
 
Re: Gibson factory setup ... sucks?

My local luthier charges about £50 and does a top notch job

+1 Mine charges about £45 for a setup, probably £40 for a new nut and about £60ish for a fret dress.

You probably wouldn't need all that work, a good setup would probably suffice.
 
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