hinesarchtop Posted October 8 Author Posted October 8 On 10/5/2024 at 1:09 PM, Gitfiddler said: One of the few guitars that I regret selling was a very limited run Ibanez AR3000 reissue. Man, what a wonderful guitar! Holy cow! Thats a real beauty. The Ibanez necks and fret work on those high end model are something special. I love the deep dish carve. 1
High Flying Bird Posted October 8 Posted October 8 I took a photo in 2010, the day after I received my Marvbird, at a railroad museum across the road where Marv grew up. This guitar is really a collector's piece. I was afraid to play it. It totally ate my guts up to let other people play it. One wrong move or act of dumbassery and this guitar would have been rendered useless. I have never had a regretful thought about selling it. I also can't stand to let people play my 535 because it has a Bigsby on it. People tend to try and wear out the Bigsby instead of appreciating the guitar. 5
Millennium Maestro Posted October 8 Posted October 8 On 10/4/2024 at 7:11 AM, RJLII said: This one I wonder if that one is now mine? Time to pull it out and check the FB graining
RJLII Posted October 8 Posted October 8 I may have the SN recorded. If I can find it I’ll let you know. As I recall it had Sperzel tuners, Lollar pickups, a pigtail bridge, and a pickguard from a HOC member. I put a shim under the bridge P90 too.
yoslate Posted October 9 Posted October 9 On 10/7/2024 at 7:47 AM, Dick Seacup said: Once upon a time there was an H-170 with Bigsby that became affectionally known as "The Tone Sucker." Regret followed not long after. No kiddin'! At least you have company. Man, I loved that thing!! 1
hinesarchtop Posted October 9 Author Posted October 9 On 10/5/2024 at 1:09 PM, Gitfiddler said: One of the few guitars that I regret selling was a very limited run Ibanez AR3000 reissue. Man, what a wonderful guitar! Holy cow! Thats a real beauty. The Ibanez necks and fret work on those high end model are something special. I love the deep dish carve. 1
hinesarchtop Posted October 9 Author Posted October 9 Heritage wise I've sold a few that I regret, but I truly feel blessed by all of the wonderful instruments that I've owned. There was an early H357 that satisfied my Johnny Winter fascination that I sold. I think it went to a guy that I found out later owned several. Heritage made me a remarkably gorgeous custom Sweet 16 with a 3 3/8" deep body, highly quilted back and sides, hrw pickup, and burnt amber back and sides with antique natural top. Oh yeah..it was X braced with routed neck pickup. It was something they did to make up for a terrible experience with the dealer Ed Roman. I loved it, but needed money for my guitar building/wood buying ventures. I tried to hunt it down through old eBay messages and emails, but the guy I sold it to had also sold it, and offered no information. Then there was the most beautiful H555 ever. I bought it from Wolfe. It had intensely figured woods throughout with natural finish. One piece neck and hrw pickups. I couldn't get a bad sound from it. Again, sacrificed for the cause. There are more, but the one I'd like to have back the most is a 1996 Golden Eagle I ordered new from bay state vintage guitars. It had upgraded woods with OSB finish, and an added tone knob. The neck was really cool. It was deeper than most, with a small heel and a soft D shape. I played the heck out of that guitar wearing the finish off of the back of the neck and a bit off of the pickguard. Again, a sacrifice for the cause. It was number 545. 1
big bob Posted October 9 Posted October 9 I had a non cutaway 575 with natural binding, I sold it to Ned, I would love to have that back! 1
rockabilly69 Posted October 10 Posted October 10 On 10/8/2024 at 4:57 PM, RJLII said: Here’s another photo That pickguard design is great and really works with that guitar!
yoslate Posted October 10 Posted October 10 12 hours ago, rockabilly69 said: That pickguard design is great and really works with that guitar! A guy on the forum who called himself Cryoman was making those for forum members for a time. And yeah, a good look for those.
Gitfiddler Posted October 10 Posted October 10 1 hour ago, yoslate said: A guy on the forum who called himself Cryoman was making those for forum members for a time. And yeah, a good look for those. @Cryoman...I'd love one of his designs for my ltd. ed. HOC H137.
bolero Posted October 14 Posted October 14 (edited) Came across an old pic, some gtrs I've sold & some I still have. I'd be lying if I said I didn't miss a few. Should have kept the Hiwatt 50w stack & the AC30 too. Edited October 14 by bolero word entanglement
Spectrum13 Posted October 14 Posted October 14 29 minutes ago, bolero said: Came across an old pic, some gtrs I've sold & some I still have. I'd be lying if I said I didn't miss a few. Should have kept the Hiwatt 50w stack & the AC30 too. Chris, You are one sick person. I know because I suffer from the same disease 1
bolero Posted October 14 Posted October 14 (edited) Well, all but 5 of those gtrs are gone They were all good though! Edited October 14 by bolero good 'uns
MartyGrass Posted October 15 Posted October 15 On 10/7/2024 at 7:47 AM, Dick Seacup said: Once upon a time there was an H-170 with Bigsby that became affectionally known as "The Tone Sucker." Regret followed not long after. I recall that well. The Bigsby factory once was next door to Gibson. The Bigsby among us was considered an upgrade. I don't think tone had a thing to do with that attitude. Also, doing three sets with a 12 lb. instrument was not a concern at all decades ago. This is a side issue. My guess is that having a Bigsby on a solid body didn't affect tone much, if at all. It may be a different story on a Golden Eagle. 1
Ned Posted November 6 Posted November 6 On 10/9/2024 at 9:57 AM, big bob said: I had a non cutaway 575 with natural binding, I sold it to Ned, I would love to have that back! I played her today! She's a good one for sure. 1 1
bolero Posted November 20 Posted November 20 I did once track down & buy back a strat I sold to someone, who'd since sold it to someone else.
MartyGrass Posted November 21 Posted November 21 I did get a replacement for my 1960s Gibson ES-345 with a 2022 version. I've now played it enough to have an opinion. First, the Varitone and the stereo features I didn't ever need. Gibson stopped putting them into the ES-345. The new version has a fuller neck than the '60s and is built to be at least as good as the earlier builds. The finish and woods look the same. Thumbs up. The guitar has Phat Cats in it, which really sound fine. I have the original pickups as well, which I haven't tried. The reports on them are generally very positive. I have a fairly recent H-535. The build quality between the two are comparable. Most "the guitar that got away" stories don't have a happy ending. This one does. 2
bolero Posted November 22 Posted November 22 Beauty! How long ago did you sell the 60s one? I had a chance to buy a '63 for pretty cheap $ few years ago, maybe shoulda....oh well
TalismanRich Posted November 22 Posted November 22 That guitar takes me back to my guitar lessons in the mid 60s at Dee Wells music studio. They had one in the display case for sale (WAY more than we could afford), but seeing that, as well as guys like Johnny Rivers on the cover of his album Live at the Whiskey a Go Go just fired up my first case of guitar lust. You can have your Les Pauls and Strats. That's what a guitar should look like! 1
MartyGrass Posted November 22 Posted November 22 I remember Johnny Rivers. I didn't understand what he meant by secret Asian man! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RBHcWvqXUQI Here's the classic ES-345 video. The trouble is that this was supposed to occur in 1955, which is four years before Gibson introduced the guitar. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_WSXXPQYeY Michael J. Fox is, or was, a guitarist. You can tell by how he does this video. The center block is a combination of spruce and maple. Heritage may do the same but with a slightly thinner depth. 1
mars_hall Posted November 22 Posted November 22 I'd want to get this one back. This is my stock 1960 Les Paul Jr, that actually was a true "Junior" in the original sense of the word, it being a 3/4 scale. I had bought it used down in Indy for $200. The neck was stout and fit my hands well, giving that advantage the long fingered pickers know. While the P90 could get noisy if you were cranked and left the strings open between songs, once you dug in, it had that biting edge you hear when rippin' nails out of old sappy oak. This guitar was stolen during a Christmas Eve burglary of my home back then while I was away. The police recovered it about a month later from a "fence" they had under surveillance. If I remember correctly, this one had a five digit serial number like 00216. The police would know 😜
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