Luthiers, A few questions.

NathanCahill

New member
A while back I posted a thread about a friend of mine's Gibson Byrdland he bought back in the 60's , somewhere around 69. This guy can play great but his idea of maintenance leaves a little to be desired. Several years ago he quit playing with a band and started using all kinds of effects so he could play by himself. He wound up switching to a Strat and stored the Byrdland. Before he stored it he thought he was doing it a favor by spraying it down with furniture polish and wiping it down. He got it out recently and the gold pickup covers and the bridge to some extent have a green tint to them and have some sort of powder at the edges (kinda like the corrosion on copper). The pickgaurd has also almost disintegrated, so it will need replaced. Beyond that the finish has some checking and small spot. If I can get the pickups straitened out and a new pickgaurd on it he would like to start playing it again. At the moment he is just ashamed of it.

First off are the pickups worth saving or should I just replace them with Antiquities? - either way the originals will be saved they just may get replaced in the guitar.

Second, I have asked about getting a pickgaurd made for it and the name Chris Mirabella has came up multiple times. Should I just give him a call and go from there or would just a pickgaurd be kind of pretentious to ask for.

The guitar is a tobacco burts finish with gold hardware and an original Bigsby. The Pickgaurd according to my friend (after showing him some examples) appears to have been a tortise shell type guard with a white stripe around the edge (standard tortise shell laminante).

The sticker inside the F-Hole Says it is from the Kalamazoo plant and it's serial number apears to be 801025. I could not fully read the one on the back of the headstock being black finished and the serial number in Black as well but from what I can tell it also appears to read 801025.

I would appreceate it if some one could date it for me.

(I have a few pics if I can figure out how to email them to my self from my phone. I can't seem to find out how to input the @ symbol for the email address.)
 
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Re: Luthiers, A few questions.

Do a Google Search on Gibson Serial numbers. As far as pickguards go. I'm sure Mirabella can do a fine job of rebuilding your pickguard. When I replaced my pickguard on my L5 about 4 years ago I bought it from
http://www.guitar-parts.com/ I was very satisfied with the end reesult. If you are happy with the sound of the pickups, I would leave them alone. If you are not, I would change them out for Seth Lovers and keep the old pickups. r/rob
 
Re: Luthiers, A few questions.

If you're looking for a place that you can get a new pickguard made, you might want to try out www.terrapinguitars.com. I got a pickguard from them, and am quite happy with it. They'll do custom orders too, if you specify exactly what you want.
 
Re: Luthiers, A few questions.

Thanks for all the info guys. John no offense taken, sound advice. The work is with in my capabilities but I’m waiting until I get positive ID before I work up a plan of attack. At this point I am just locating the correct parts for him. If it turns out to be just a pickup swap or cleaning and the installation of a new pick guard I may do it. It’s a pain working through the F holes though. If I don’t feel comfortable doing the work I’ll get the parts for him then send him to a guy I know and see if he’ll do it. At no point will this instrument be damaged any further, not by me anyway. :)

BTW: The tunning keys are metal Keystone knobed. The body front and the neck are bound using standard cream color binding.
 
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Re: Luthiers, A few questions.

Judging from some information I've found it appears to be a '69, as that is when the rounded cutaway came back. The serial number is for '66 or '69. I haven't gotten ahold of chris yet but I plan to today. Apparently the correct name for the finish is Vintage Sunburst but I've also seen it listed as Tabacco Burst.
 
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