Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

I always figured that the Gibson-esque Warmoth bodies were not built exactly to Gibson dimensions, specifically to avoid this. The LPs never looked right to me, and the Explorers were obviously tweaked a bit. The closest looking ones were the Vs IMO.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Unofficial info here; the Explorer is safe, LP's, SG's, and V's will probably need new perimeters. Haven't heard any discussion on the headstocks. None of our body designs line up exactly with the originals.

My questions is why now? Warmoth has been making these for awhile. Guess they needed a win for the hounds in legal.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Well what about Tokai? They make exact copies of Gibson guitars. Gibson sued them once but lost, I don't know why. Or maybe I'm missing something here.

They changed their headplate design from the point of complaint on.

Many also changed the specific curve on the horns. I don't think it was ever decided in court whether that was required, before the Fender trial which from what I understood made clear you don't have to do that.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Unofficial info here; the Explorer is safe, LP's, SG's, and V's will probably need new perimeters. Haven't heard any discussion on the headstocks. None of our body designs line up exactly with the originals.

My questions is why now? Warmoth has been making these for awhile. Guess they needed a win for the hounds in legal.

interesting...

the L5S, and doublecut LP models were also taken offline from the website.

I hope you guys can fight it... If they don't match the Gibsons, then there's no reason you shouldn't be allowed to produce them.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

They changed their headplate design from the point of complaint on.

Many also changed the specific curve on the horns. I don't think it was ever decided in court whether that was required, before the Fender trial which from what I understood made clear you don't have to do that.

I know their Fender copies have different headstocks but my LP is pretty much identical to Gibson except that it says Tokai in a different font and Love Rock in the same font as Les Paul on Gibsons.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

I know their Fender copies have different headstocks but my LP is pretty much identical to Gibson except that it says Tokai in a different font and Love Rock in the same font as Les Paul on Gibsons.

What makes you think yours is not from before they changed?

Some Japanese companies also split production and made the old style headstock (the one too close in design) for the Asian market and a new changed one for export to the US.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

What makes you think yours is not from before they changed?

Some Japanese companies also split production and made the old style headstock (the one too close in design) for the Asian market and a new changed one for export to the US.

Well my headstock is exactly like the ones the sell right now so I doubt that they sell years old guitars. And I remember discussing this when I bought mine ten years ago.

I know the Asian market is its own entity but I would think that here in Finland we would have the "western" versions.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Well my headstock is exactly like the ones the sell right now so I doubt that they sell years old guitars. And I remember discussing this when I bought mine ten years ago.

I know the Asian market is its own entity but I would think that here in Finland we would have the "western" versions.

Europe is very different in what can be trademarked from the US.

I can't comment specifically whether Tokai's headstock design violates the headplate trademark.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Why doesn't fender sue?

Fender doesn't take their ball and run home; leaving everyone sitting there with nothing to play with. Fender licenses all their body, neck, hardware, etc. styles. Everyone wins. Companies like Warmoth just "pay to play".

Gibson is too prideful to even think about doing that.

Wrong.

Cause they bought a license to use the Fender designs.

Correct.

I always thought that Warmoth reproduced the Gibson headstock and other proprietary designs under a licensing agreement.

Same here. They've been building Gibson-looking stuff (right down to the headstock shape) for many years now. I sincerely doubt that Gibson is just now getting around to suing them. My impression is that Warmoth licensed the designs from Gibson, just as they are currently doing with Fender.

If Gibson chose to end that agreement, it's a bit of a bummer for people who want to make their own weird bolt-on versions of Gibson stuff, but it's certainly Gibson's right to do so.

But then.. I'm not sure I see the problem.

Warmoth also says "New, similar but non infringing, bodies will be available in the coming months."

So.. if you want to make a gibson-style guitar from Warmoth parts, you still can. If your gripe is that it won't look exactly like a Gibson, well, doesn't that kind of prove Gibson's point?

What I mean is - if you want to buy/assemble a guitar that uses all of Gibson's intellectual property, you should have to buy it from them.

Definitely agree with all this.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Well my headstock is exactly like the ones the sell right now so I doubt that they sell years old guitars. And I remember discussing this when I bought mine ten years ago.

I know the Asian market is its own entity but I would think that here in Finland we would have the "western" versions.

Quite the opposite actually, the Japanese "Export" versions would better be described as the US-versions.

I was informed first hand by a Japanese company whose guitars I was interested in that I actually wouldn't have to go through the whole "buy-it-on-line-and-ship-it" song and dance.
Since I live in a European Union country our local dealers can order guitars meant for the Japanese market all day long.
The US restrictions do not apply to us.

The US patents and/or trademarks don't fly in Europe unless they WERE (also) patented/trademarked in Europe, and as a general rule, the European patent and trademark offices are considerably less liberal/accepting with what a company may try to patent/trademark.

To put it simpler, if DiMarzio were a company based in pretty much any European Union country, people would be making double-cream and mirror pickups all day long (and actually, in the EU, they can and they do!).
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Quite the opposite actually, the Japanese "Export" versions would better be described as the US-versions.

I was informed first hand by a Japanese company whose guitars I was interested in that I actually wouldn't have to go through the whole "buy-it-on-line-and-ship-it" song and dance.
Since I live in a European Union country our local dealers can order guitars meant for the Japanese market all day long.
The US restrictions do not apply to us.

The US patents and/or trademarks don't fly in Europe unless they WERE (also) patented/trademarked in Europe, and as a general rule, the European patent and trademark offices are considerably less liberal/accepting with what a company may try to patent/trademark.

To put it simpler, if DiMarzio were a company based in pretty much any European Union country, people would be making double-cream and mirror pickups all day long (and actually, in the EU, they can and they do!).

You know what, that sounds very true and familiar, now that I think of it.

But we do have some odd things we can and can't get here.

We can't get US Ibanez here (except Custom Shop stuff ofr artists), but we can get Japanese and Euro Versions here, which are very different.

ESP we can get US and Japanese stuff.

Fender we can get US stuff but not Japanese stuff.

Yeah all the EU pickups makers can, indeed, make double-creme hums all they want. So sorry SD and USA.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

Unofficial info here; the Explorer is safe, LP's, SG's, and V's will probably need new perimeters. Haven't heard any discussion on the headstocks. None of our body designs line up exactly with the originals.

My questions is why now? Warmoth has been making these for awhile. Guess they needed a win for the hounds in legal.

Thanks for the "leak."

"Why now" is my main thought on the matter as well.

The Warmoth shapes are different than the Gibson shapes, but not enough different to hold up in court?
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

It would probably help if they called them something else, like the firebird should be the trans am, explorer should be exploder, or roll over-er, lol.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

I called up Warmoth today and asked them about certain "Gibson Style Necks" to purchase, and they told me not to worry about anything.
 
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Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

To be fair, if my warmoth (in my avatar) was exactly like my Gibson lp, it would have a $hitty neck angle, a bump at the 14th fret, and a crap ass cheap bridge with saddles that never quite lined up with the pole pieces in the horrible sounding 498t that came stock. Its a custom i bought new in '88, so the binding is very nice. But I'm not bitter. So theoretically, you could say the two designs are different enough. I'm done ranting now. The night is young, I still have time to go Plek myself.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

I always figured that the Gibson-esque Warmoth bodies were not built exactly to Gibson dimensions, specifically to avoid this. The LPs never looked right to me, and the Explorers were obviously tweaked a bit. The closest looking ones were the Vs IMO.

I figured they probably got away with it cuz they are bolt ons and not selling set necked models.

Unofficial info here; the Explorer is safe, LP's, SG's, and V's will probably need new perimeters. Haven't heard any discussion on the headstocks. None of our body designs line up exactly with the originals.

My questions is why now? Warmoth has been making these for awhile. Guess they needed a win for the hounds in legal.


I was wondering about the Explorer.. Thats what Id most like to build is an explorer copy.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

I just found this picture of Leo Fender playing an early 600's Tele:

images


:joke:

Patents are intended to protect the inventor for a limited time while simultaneously encouraging them to put their designs into the public domain. Trademarks are intended to protect a company from imitators who try to pass their clones off as "the real thing."

I could see a problem if Warmoth was claiming to sell Gibson(TM) bodies, but they aren't. A lot of companies make guitars that are the same basic shape, and most consumers can tell the difference. Let's just hope they don't start going after companies that try to cop that "trademark sound..."

EDIT: Dang, beaten to the punch. :smack:

Lol. Sorry. I mean 1974 and 60's. It was 7 am, so sue me. Like Gibson is to Warmoth.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

I've read some very thoughtful posts that have made me reconsider my position. I'm not totally letting Gibson off the hook here, but I'd love to put some thoughts out there and maybe get some people scratching their chin the way you guys made me. So here it goes...

Guys...Gibson owns the rights to those body shapes and if they want to tell Warmoth to stop using them they are well within their rights to do so.

As for Gibson prices are you guys saying they are priced too high based on real information or based on the fact that you want them to be cheaper??

As for the QC I think Gibson is making some of the best guitars they've made in a long time and IMHO the QC at Gibson has been rather good for a while now...everybody turns out a clunker now and then but trust me when I say everybody...

Some really good points here. I agree with the statement that Gibson has the right to protect its own ideas. Not disagreeing, but I have a counterpoint that I will come back to.

As for prices, I should've been more specific about my beef here. Is $2k too much for a quality built, well appointed guitar? No. But where Gibson frustrates me to no end is I never understand why there are sometimes vast pricing differences on guitars that don't appear prima facia to be that different. Take my Explorers. I have the standard one and the Traditional Pro. The standard one is MSRP $2,399 US and can be had at Guitar Center for $1,399 US. Then there's the Traditional Pro. It's a slightly smaller body, has binding on the body and neck, has a BB3 and a 57 Classic, and sports more complicated wiring with each volume knob being a push/pull for tapping (which means the pots are pricier too). All of these things would make me think the price is higher. Nope. MSRP $2,199 US ($200 cheaper) and $1,399 US (same) at GC. I'm not complaining that I didn't have to spend more, but I just don't get it. The smaller body uses less wood but being non-standard would make me think it raises cost. I'm not saying there isn't a reason for it, but I'd like to know what it is.

This occurs on LPs all the time in reverse. The Studio models are cheaper because the wood isn't figured, no binding, more standard pickups, finish is cheaper... you get the idea. So how does this all add-up? At least when i visit Fender's website they are explicit in listing details and I almost always can tell right away where my extra coin is going. THIS is what makes me get frustrated with Gibson prices! If the wood is "select" wood as Fender will tell you, then knowing that would at least make me get it. I get bitter when i'm not sure what I'm paying for. They don't have to lower their prices, but I would like better knowledge of what features create the number on the tag.

I agree every company will produce a lemon from time to time but some of the stuff I've seen from Gibson really gets to me. I've seen pickguards on explorers missing screws because no one ever drilled the screw hole. Not a big deal, but why did it get missed? What else was neglected? I've seen pickguards that weren't put on right and were bent and bowing. The real killer for me was my tech showing me a Custom Shop LP that had the notch in the saddles cut wrong. On a $5,000 guitar from your prestigious custom shop? That's just not acceptable. This past weekend, I was cruising the local GC and spotted a black explorer with a shoddy paint job that would look bad on an Epi or a Squier. My $1,399 won't accept that. I've seen some pretty bad screw-ups from just about every company, no question. But Gibson's QC keeps me scratching my head. When they get it right, they make fantastic guitars. But for the prices they charge I wish I didn't see some of these issues.

This is something most knuckle draggers dont understand. If you dont defend a trademark you will lose it. Gibson historically has protected their stuff. All the way back in the 70's with suing Ibanez over their copies. God forbid someone protects their intellectual property.

I like this. Very solid point. I side with Gibson on Ibanez and even ESP. I was considering buying an LTD Explorer back in the day because it looked exactly the same. Perfect reason to cry foul on Gibson's part. Talking to a coworker today, he made a fantastic point that is essentially what you are saying here. If you don't stop people early on from infringing on your intellectual property it will never stop. It's a point I can't argue against. If you let one company do it, next thing, 5 companies are doing it. So from that point, I agree. Gibson has every right to protect its interests by trademarking and guarding its intellectual property.

What still bugs me is this: "Why Warmoth, and why now?" Like I said in my first post, they're a niche market that caters to those of us who want something that they just don't offer (tubecrunch is a great example). To build one from my estimate is about the same as buying a Gibson so for my money I'd rather just buy the Gibson (unless I really wanted something wacky). To be fair, I get it. The Guy Who Invented Fire and Edgecrusher have great points. It's the timing and who they're targeting that makes this seem a little bit mean-spirited.
 
Re: Gibson is halting warmoth builds!?!?

People please read the prs vs ****son lawsuit.

****son does not have a trademark for their body designs. It all falls under a general rule.

****son is a crooked, rotten company. I am seriously considering selling my 76 custom and my 94 centennial studio. I dont want to be associated with that bunch of *******s. They are, apperenty so scared by a parts manufacturer who builds BOLT ON GUITARS, that they send out a cease and decist letter with strong formulation.

Instead of selling off your Gibsons, perhaps a better way to 'vote' as a consumer would be to buy something from Warmoth. If you feel that strongly about it.

I wasn't saying that Gibson has a trademark on their body shapes, but they certainly have a trademark on the name Gibson, and probably on "Les Paul" and a few others. If a company were claiming to sell "Gibson" bodies, they would be (ab)using a trademark.

"Why Warmoth, Why Now" can probably be explained by size. It is very expensive to fight a lawsuit against a large company, so a big fish can often squash a smaller competitor simply by issuing a cease-and-desist letter. If you choose not to C&D, you'd better be prepared to spend a lot of coin in court, and then the outcome is not guaranteed. It probably makes better business sense for Warmoth to alter their designs and get back to doing what they do best.

Either way, good publicity for Warmoth, and probably neutral or bad for Gibson.
 
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