
cavedog101
Well-known member
Interesting subject...and one,I'm sure, will become very important as time goes by.There are a finite number of 'vintage' guitars.....obviously.They make new guitar collectors everyday.
I've personally owned four 'L' series Strats,a 1959 Les Paul Jr.,a 1961LesPaul Special(SG Style) with traps on the neck a vibrola tailpiece and P-90's--ie.Totally custom ordered.A 1961 J-Bass,1965 P-bass,1962 P-bass,1961 Tele,1964 Tele,1965 Tele,1969 Tele.!960 D18 Martin,1964 Gibson EB-2,1968 Thunderbird,1968 Hagstrom 8-string bass,1973 Fretless P-bass,1970 Dan Armstrong Bass,1968 Ampeg AEB-1.....plus many others.
I wish I had been interested in 'collecting'.I just love instruments and was always trading them around and buying and selling when I needed the cash.
As far as 'fakes'....The parts are the hardest to indentify as you have to see the instrument dissassembled to accuratly assess the fakery.As far as feel and playability of the instrument, its pretty obvious when you pick up a real 'elderly' instrument.Its the way the finish has soaked into the wood, the dry feeling you get from the guitar(especially acoustics) and in the case of really old strats and teles, the cheapness.Theres one good thing to think about when comtemplating a 'mint' vintage instrument.Its MINT because it was a piece of crap to begin with and no one wanted to play it.The 'players' are the instruments to have.Crappy finishes,beat to death, probably sound incredible...or a good conditioned refin....theres where you find great instruments.
I've personally owned four 'L' series Strats,a 1959 Les Paul Jr.,a 1961LesPaul Special(SG Style) with traps on the neck a vibrola tailpiece and P-90's--ie.Totally custom ordered.A 1961 J-Bass,1965 P-bass,1962 P-bass,1961 Tele,1964 Tele,1965 Tele,1969 Tele.!960 D18 Martin,1964 Gibson EB-2,1968 Thunderbird,1968 Hagstrom 8-string bass,1973 Fretless P-bass,1970 Dan Armstrong Bass,1968 Ampeg AEB-1.....plus many others.
I wish I had been interested in 'collecting'.I just love instruments and was always trading them around and buying and selling when I needed the cash.
As far as 'fakes'....The parts are the hardest to indentify as you have to see the instrument dissassembled to accuratly assess the fakery.As far as feel and playability of the instrument, its pretty obvious when you pick up a real 'elderly' instrument.Its the way the finish has soaked into the wood, the dry feeling you get from the guitar(especially acoustics) and in the case of really old strats and teles, the cheapness.Theres one good thing to think about when comtemplating a 'mint' vintage instrument.Its MINT because it was a piece of crap to begin with and no one wanted to play it.The 'players' are the instruments to have.Crappy finishes,beat to death, probably sound incredible...or a good conditioned refin....theres where you find great instruments.