Les PaulBearer
New member
So in 2007 I bought a Japanese Tokai LS-150F as a stage spare. I had always played Fenders, but after being offered a sweet deal on a Gibson 336, which I couldn't refuse, I started playing the thing all the time and "needed" another hum-bucking friend for it. I ordered the LS-150F without playing it (a bit silly! It was pretty in the pics though) but it turned out ok and after a quick set up was more than acceptable. In fact it played beautifully but always sounded a little lame plugged in - no matter, it was a spare. The guitar, wood wise, is a pretty faithful '59 copy, the neck and body measure pretty identically to a '59 and it has an excellent nitro finish. A few moths ago I became a little obsessed with playing it unplugged but was still a bit let down by it's plugged in sound. I took the control cavity cover off for the first time and after a bit of study worked out that it was probably spec'd and wired the same as a mid 2000s Standard Les Paul (Orange Drops and CTS pots) with potted, possibly ceramic, low output 'buckers.
I took the decision to do right by the craftsmanship they put into the wood and ordered some SD Seth Lovers, CTS vintage taper pots and Luxe Bumblebee caps. Hey presto! Sounds magic - weirdly, I'm sure it actually sounds even better unplugged too (could be the clean up of the wiring and the lighter unpotted p'ups? Could be psychosomatic?) - but it now responds totally differently to my amps. Wide open, bigger, fatter more driven but also more subtle and articulate in response to playing. Sounds older, much more bluesy, less compressed.
Recommend this to any Les Paul type guitar owner who is disappointed with the plugged in sound but loves the feel of the axe in question.
Tried to emulate the look of the '59 wiring from photos from google, first pic is original wiring, second pic new wiring and then the finished article -



I took the decision to do right by the craftsmanship they put into the wood and ordered some SD Seth Lovers, CTS vintage taper pots and Luxe Bumblebee caps. Hey presto! Sounds magic - weirdly, I'm sure it actually sounds even better unplugged too (could be the clean up of the wiring and the lighter unpotted p'ups? Could be psychosomatic?) - but it now responds totally differently to my amps. Wide open, bigger, fatter more driven but also more subtle and articulate in response to playing. Sounds older, much more bluesy, less compressed.
Recommend this to any Les Paul type guitar owner who is disappointed with the plugged in sound but loves the feel of the axe in question.
Tried to emulate the look of the '59 wiring from photos from google, first pic is original wiring, second pic new wiring and then the finished article -



Last edited: