I seem to need to clarify my statements on this thread. Ok, so I'm not the "great communicator"!
I was afraid I would have to go into more detail on this,,, and here it is:
The rough frets I was talking about was not on the "crown" or length of the fret. But rather on the end of the fret wire. There was actually an unfinished barb on the ends. And not just one fret, but all the way up and down the neck! I suppose they either snip it off by hand after they set the frets or a machine does it. Whatever.
The frets were not smoothed out. That is really unacceptable for a guitar in any price range. I was flat out disappointed that Gibson would let this happen across the board. I'm also disappointed that Guitar Center let them ship that junk to their stores and still charge those un-godly prices.
I shall hamer Gibsons a little more while I'm on the subject.
What's with the rough f holes on the 335's? Jeez, they don't even hit them with 100 grit to take the router marks off.
Ok, now I'll flame Guitar Center a little more:
What's with the rusty strings on the $2500 hollow body Gretsch you're trying to sell me? Put new strings on and maybe I would have bought it and not the $350
Hammer Echotone (off of Ebay!).
And what's up with someone buying several of the same style guitar (like 4 strats or 3 acoustics), when they could really expand their playing ability by buying different types of guitars?
If you own both the original and the re-issue.... and then
the slacker one or two they marketed in between. What's up with that?
Why do people take their guitar into a shop to have the intonation set?
How many pedals does it really take?
My fingers have been genetically altered to grow Dunlop picks instead of fingernails. How cool is that?
I dream in stereo.
Good night.