Got this 1908 Gibson L-1 recently for what I think is a bit much but everybody else thinks is a steal. I don't agree with them!
A previous owner started removing the original finish(sigh) and stopped halfway through because, well , it's not fun!
It had no hardware at all so to try it out I put on some Gotoh tuners I had, a hofner tailpiece, a nut that's too small and faked up and archtop ebony bridge. Put silk and steel strings on it and strung it up to see what would happen and to see how it sounds. Not bad for 110 years old. Not mindblowing but I bought it mostly as a project..Plays great despite the log neck. Lots of kooky old repairs, cracks and cleats galore, back was put on,I think with hide glue, but not perfect (a bit of under hang and over hang here and there, heel block was cracked and repaired as was the very end of the heel. All seems to be solid, but not pretty.
I have a couple of questions:
-The original bridges for these were these unusual maple units with an ebony top?
they seem to look halfway between an archtop bridge and a violin bridge.
Is the maple part at all necessary? Does anyone know why Gibson used maple?? Was it a holdover from violin or banjo bridge construction?
It sounds decent with the really rough ebony unit that's on there
-break angle. This thing has a killer neck angle, bridge is 1.25" high on the bass side!! whew. Seems to work fine. Top may have sunk a tiny bit but it looks pretty good when I compare it to the back, a bit of a flat spot in the middle, Doesn't seem to sag when the strings are tensioned and the interior braces seem solid.
-finish - I can see two routes. As it has MANY repair cracks etc I was going to go with the dark brownish sort of colour it looks like it had originally
-So stain and thin nitro?
-or a combo of tinted nitro and clear?