Dr. Vegetable
New member
...That is the question.
Got a cool deal on this pawn shop find - a 1978 Ibanez MT-200NT Musician. Pretty awesome guitar, but it's in need of a little attention.
It's in good physical shape. The neck is straight, and everything plays well. It also sounds excellent - really bluesy pickups on board this one! The previous owner replaced the bridge and tuners, and painted the (originally chrome) tailpiece with flat grey paint - apparently without removing it from the guitar first. It has a bunch of dings in the finish, front and back, and a few cracks around the output jack. The wood is staring to darken underneath some of the dings.
This is what it should look like:
This is what it actually looks like:
I'm looking for an original bridge to put on it, but they are hard to find in chrome.
So a question for all you vintage Ibanez lovers out there - should I sand this puppy down and refinish it, or should I leave it as-is? My gut tells me to go ahead and restore it, as it is rather beautiful underneath all that crud. I don't think the original finish adds much (any?) value to this instrument, but I'd hate to **** it up just the same.
Any advice?
Got a cool deal on this pawn shop find - a 1978 Ibanez MT-200NT Musician. Pretty awesome guitar, but it's in need of a little attention.
It's in good physical shape. The neck is straight, and everything plays well. It also sounds excellent - really bluesy pickups on board this one! The previous owner replaced the bridge and tuners, and painted the (originally chrome) tailpiece with flat grey paint - apparently without removing it from the guitar first. It has a bunch of dings in the finish, front and back, and a few cracks around the output jack. The wood is staring to darken underneath some of the dings.
This is what it should look like:

This is what it actually looks like:
I'm looking for an original bridge to put on it, but they are hard to find in chrome.
So a question for all you vintage Ibanez lovers out there - should I sand this puppy down and refinish it, or should I leave it as-is? My gut tells me to go ahead and restore it, as it is rather beautiful underneath all that crud. I don't think the original finish adds much (any?) value to this instrument, but I'd hate to **** it up just the same.
Any advice?