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PostPosted: Sat Mar 14, 2015 1:48 pm 
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Joined: Sun Mar 06, 2011 12:04 am
Posts: 5824
First name: Chris
Last Name: Pile
City: Wichita
State: Kansas
Country: Good old US of A
Focus: Repair
Status: Professional
OK, guys and gals - I've been working on Gibsons since 1977 and have never had this trouble. It's a 12 year old J-160 E with the kinda P-90 looking pickup right at the end of the fingerboard. Been having to string and unstring a lot fixing the action, and after lunch, I came back to the bench and saw this white thing inside the guitar. It's a brass grounding plate that was stuck on with double-sided sticky tape - now long dried out.

I cleaned all the goo off the plate with lemon oil, and I have no double sided tape right now. Anyone have a better suggestion? Will RTV silicone work? I hate to epoxy it, or use CA. What say, folks?

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PostPosted: Sat Mar 14, 2015 3:09 pm 
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Joined: Sun Mar 06, 2011 12:04 am
Posts: 5824
First name: Chris
Last Name: Pile
City: Wichita
State: Kansas
Country: Good old US of A
Focus: Repair
Status: Professional
Never mind. Had to run to Wallyworld to get some milk and picked up a roll of the tape. Problem solved.

By the way, this Gibson flattop from the Bozeman plant is terrible! The neck is twisted and warps back right at the 14 fret. And it sounds so tinny - no depth at all. Have tried several brands of strings and jacked the neck around, shimmed the bridge saddle, touched up some frets, etc. I might get it almost playable.

The thing looks brand new, don't think it's been gigged much at all.

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PostPosted: Sun Mar 15, 2015 10:51 am 
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Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2015 11:31 am
Posts: 8
First name: Zachary
Last Name: Duran
City: chicago
State: illinois
Zip/Postal Code: 60629
Country: usa
Focus: Repair
Status: Professional
we've been seeing a lot of sad guitars coming out of a number of gibson factories. . . just had a es339 custom shop that needs the fingerboard taken off and neck reinforced because it has waaaaaaaaaaay too much relief. truss rod was tightened so much it compressed the wood behind the half washer. surprised it didn't snap in half, to be honest. but that was the 5th or 6th es339 in the past year and half that needed that sorta work. It's sad, cause i love me a gibson! I guess with wood selection becoming slim picking, there just isn't enough properly dried out, stable wood out there anymore. I get that guitars, being made out of an organic material, will move about and twist and shout to some extent, but the severity of this is becoming much more apparent.


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