Rex_Rocker
Well-known member
Yeah, they can be made to sound good, no doubt. The thing is you occasionally find the "magic" one, as you do with Gibson.Well, i dunno. Maybe i got a good one, but one thing i am 100% sure of is my epi LP special TV yellow is an incredible guitar. Just for reference, i've been playing since the early 70s and done uncountable gigs so i' not stranger to what a great guitar is. And that special is incredible, so much so it became my #1 and i swear i think it may be the best sounding guitar i have ever owned. And thats a VERY long list.
Anyways, i explained all that because the standard i recently got hangs very nicely with that special. I realize they are 2 different things, but the quality level of the standard's tone is anything but mediocre, and thats with what i consider very average stock pickups. I have no doubt with great pickups it will be very hard to find any typical gibson production model let alone the greeny to be notably better as far as tone. And as for playability, nothing at any price is gonna be better I have been able to get the action lower then any guitar i have ever owned w/o buzzing. It's actually shockingly low w/o buzz. I've gotten other guitars as low but not w/o some degree of buzz. There was one high fret but 30 minutes of leveling and its now perfection. Even with that high fret which was minimally high, it had great low action. I intend to install a set of pearly gates in it and if they sound as good as the reviews indicate i have no doubt this thing will be fantastic sounding. So like i said, maybe i got a good one, i don't know. Or maybe you have had some mediocre ones. All i know for sure is that of the uncountable guitars i've owned this LP easily sounds well within the standard of tone i hoped for when i got it and with a significant tonal upgrade i think the duncans will make it will be extremely good. The special's P90s are so good i left them in. Better balanced than the gibsons in my former gibson special and as good in all other respects. It would have been nice if the standards pups were equally good but then thats unlikely given the fact P90s are said to be a pickup thats hard to make a bad one and thats certainly not the case with HBs. In any case, you have your feelings a about it and i have mine, but then we may have had very different experiences depending on the luck of the draw with the ones we bought. I am waiting on a seller to respond on a particular set of PG duncans and if i get the answer i want i will post a review on how the standard sounds stock compared to the PGs.
Personally, for me, their QC problem isn't really in the construction/finish department. It's the frets. Both of mine had the issue. It was bad on both.
OK, agreed, a fret level, and it's all fine and dandy. But the fret material they use is also really cheap. I must have played the gibson like 90% of the time compared to the Epi 1959 I had. Yet, the Epi was showing more signs of fret wear than the Gibson.
Most reviewers' experience I've seen seem to agree with my experience with Epi about the fretwork. Personally, bringing a new guitar home, stringing it up with my prefferred set of strings and bringing the action to where I like it only to find I cannot have it that way because I get dead notes all over the fretboard REALLY bums me out, because that means I have to take it somewhere to have my frets level and recrowned, and that means I'm going to have to wait a whole week or so to even be able to play it. I don't know how to do the process myself. I guess that's my next a so that I can skip the wait altogether. But I mean... should new guitars be like that? I wouldn't think so, personally. Especially when the LPC is 800 and the 1959 is 1K. I mean, I get it with 500 dollar and below guitars. But just to compare, I have NEVER had an LTD that had that issue out of the box.
Last edited: