JALIN said:I like 'um.![]()
Paint and tone, no difference! Tone is in the wood. Take two same type of woods from different trees and that there is what will give you the difference in tone. All I can say is I had 2 silverburst, an 82 and this 79 and the 82 is the TONE MONSTER. It was a 1 1/2lb heavier.Guitarist said:I know you like 'um, I've seen your beauty! Tell me, if experience with other Les Paul models, say the Standard, have you noticed any tonal differences between the two? Please try to disregard all modifications as I want to know the differences between the two when they're stock...even though I'd imagine it to be quite difficult to find a stock one after all the decades of playing. Anyway...thanks!
Very nice on the successful selling of your 79 and the pickup of a Custom LP. Awesome!JALIN said:Paint and tone, no difference! Tone is in the wood. Take two same type of woods from different trees and that there is what will give you the difference in tone. All I can say is I had 2 silverburst, an 82 and this 79 and the 82 is the TONE MONSTER. It was a 1 1/2lb heavier.
79 goes bye-bye on the 21st, shipped to the mainland to some lucky ebay buyer. I will be getting a maple neck Les Paul, don`t know if it will be the camo ZW or one from the custom shop.
JALIN said:Paint and tone, no difference! Tone is in the wood. Take two same type of woods from different trees and that there is what will give you the difference in tone.
Guitarist said:Another question, if the guitar has "SECOND" engraved into the back of the headstock - I know it means that something of it wasn't at par, but could you give me some ideas on what might set this off? I did notice the guitar was difficult to tune, but I'm not sure if that alone is the reason. I need to know before dropping $1500 for it! Thanks.
Yeah, but I can get it for $950 with the blessed discount employees get.mrid said:I would not pay $1500 for a factory second.
Guitarist said:Another question, if the guitar has "SECOND" engraved into the back of the headstock - I know it means that something of it wasn't at par, but could you give me some ideas on what might set this off? I did notice the guitar was difficult to tune, but I'm not sure if that alone is the reason. I need to know before dropping $1500 for it! Thanks.
Thanks for the clear definition. Well the guitar looks great and plays great as well. Sounds like a keeper...and don't worry about the dough - I can get it a little bit cheaper. Thanks for the reply!Hellion said:Seconds are normally guitars that have finish or cosmetic flaws that the builders deemed "imperfect", kind of like buying tires that are "blems". They work fine, and don't have mechanical problems, they just have something that's just not quite right about the way they look; maybe an orange peel finish in one spot or something similar. $1500 is a lot of coin to drop on an instrument, though. Do you like the guitar? If it works for you, then it's worth it. If it doesn't, it's not.