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WOW - how prices have changed. My brand new VSB 2008 L-5 was $5700 and my brand new blonde 2010 was $6700.
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11-19-2024 12:24 PM
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Thank you for your thoughts. Much appreciated. Especially the "good ones get played".
As for any flaws fortunately I have an 80 year old luthier who started before the Beatles came to US. Tom is top notch and has seen alot. An old school craftsmanship from days gone by in the event this happens.
Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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Originally Posted by guildx500
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Way too much. I wouldn't give them a penny over 4k with a crack and who knows what else. Good luck.
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You mention their policy of paying 50% of what they think they would get for it. Well if they started at $9000 does that mean they have $4500 for it? Difficult to say other than at a starting price of $9000 and in that condition they were way off on that price. That lines up with your opinion of these folks and the nature of their small business.
Bottomline; Risk Factors Considered
1. Stringswinger, your report on the playablity and tone couldn't have come from a more knowledge source.
2. I have a skilled luthier with almost 60 years experience available to do what ever needs to be done.
3. The tone and playablity is primarily to me.
4.The "looks" mean nothing to me. I get tired of looking at all of the "Beauty Queens or Closet Queens" for sale. And limited to no ability to actually play the guitar.
5. Your testimony after playing through a stock silverface Fender Deluxe is very rare and virtually nonexistent. This is when the JGF shines with a member like yourself.
I am in no hurry to pull the trigger at this time. Perhaps someone reading this may decided to do it now.
Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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Originally Posted by 58flame
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Originally Posted by Fear the Reaper
The crack in the lower rim does not bother me. It would be easy enough for a luthier to cleat it (if it has not already been done, which I doubt).
The playwear is fine (I have seen L-5's with greater wear than this one, and the wear is part of the story of the guitar)
Someone will eventually get a cool jazz guitar with vintage mojo when this guitar sells.
@Fear The Reaper: Thanks for the kind words!
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Mr. StringSwinger, I wish I was 67. At 73, I just bought the guitar I should have bought 52 years ago (not the actual guitar) - a Gibson 335. I have an L5 CES. IN 1972, I had an influx of gig money, I loved 335's but thought an L5 would be way cooler for my gig and for jazz. To order an L5 CES then, the dealer wanted $800.00, but I'd have to wait for it.
So the next day, I bought an ES 150, y'know, the 3" 335. So it would be a 335 and an L5, right??? Wrong.
I would have got a lot more bang for my buck if I had just bought a 335. And then I got a Les Paul and a Strat. Had I lucked out I would probably still have the 335. Ah well, I've had some fun.
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That L5 in the photos: looks like the exact situation I found mine in, original p/guard missing but the p/up covers gave away the story. Only mine were rescued before it got to be so far deteriorated. All else intact, and no harm to the guitar. P/up covers are replaceable, by the right person.
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Originally Posted by Jimmy Mack
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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I contacted them
through their online form with a few questions about the guitar. They did not respond.
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Originally Posted by 2bornot2bop
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Originally Posted by [email protected]
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Originally Posted by [email protected]
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
My first good guitar was a well used '59 345 TD-SV that my dealer found for me at a very reasonable price when I was in high school. But as I found out quickly, it did not do everything a 175 did and I wasn't as happy with it as I guess I should have been. So when he found me a used 175 DN and offered to take the 345 back in trade a year or so later, I jumped at it. That was a critical decision - I adored that 175 for years until I sold it to buy a new early Norlin L-5 CN w/ a monkey on a stick. That was a big mistake!
JImmy Mack, I hope you find the joy in that 335 that's waiting for you. The 3X5s are excellent guitars that cover a lot of ground. I was too inexperienced to undstand how really good my 345 was, and I probably should have kept it since I played a lot of pop, blues, and commercial dates for many years in addition to jazz. But it "wasn't a jazz guitar", which was more important to me at 14 years old than it should have been. The 3X5s sound mighty fine for jazz, and today I'd love to have mine back!
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
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Dear Mr. Never.......
Happy Thanksgiving, sounds like you have a lot of life to be thankful for. May we all.
You mentioned : "The 3X5s sound mighty fine for jazz, and today I'd love to have mine back!"
I bought a high quality Epiphone Chinese Casino, the '61 Reissue. Because it has very resonant woods and a thin line hollow body, I find it be a great guitar for jazz, easier to handle than my L5, and an inexpensive alternative - one I'm not hesitant to take out of the house! Of course it doesn't do what a big box guitar will do, but that hollow body can go very far.
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Originally Posted by Jimmy Mack
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Originally Posted by Stringswinger
That's dressing up? Sarah looks like a gramma and Ginger looks like Micki Free or something.
ATTYA Etude
Today, 04:06 AM in Improvisation