I don't know if the guy got banned or just run off by us villagers with our flaming pitchforks, but there was a dude who insisted that all Gibsons were pieces of crap with geometry problems that lended themselves to headstock breaks, especially Les Pauls. It's basically an inside joke to everybody here.
I've had a LP Studio for five years now and the headstock is still intact
I don't see why it would be any worse than any of the other multitudes of guitars with the same headstock angle and scarf joint.
Gibson don't use a scarf joint on their headstocks.
Interesting, always figured they were (except with the three piece necks from the Norlin era). I need to take a look at mine as I figured it was.
Ive always chalked it up to mahogany necks. While it is a suitable neck wood it isnt as hard as maple is. I think it gets blown out of proportion though but I do see it happen.
It might be a joke on here but there are so called experts in the real world who claim it is true
It's not going to spontaneously break for no reason, only if there is some impact.
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I don't know if the guy got banned or just run off by us villagers with our flaming pitchforks, but there was a dude who insisted that all Gibsons were pieces of crap with geometry problems that lended themselves to headstock breaks, especially Les Pauls. It's basically an inside joke to everybody here.
I keep hearing people say that Les Paul headstocks break easily. I've had a LP Studio for five years now and the headstock is still intact. Where did this myth come from? How true is this myth or is it just isolated incidents exaggerated by haters?