When Did Tenon in Gibson Les Paul Get Long Again

The Early on Serial

Early Les Paul Standard

      This is the first of 3 major categories for late sixties Les Pauls. Every bit nosotros progress through these three sections, the structure of the guitars will get further and farther away from the 1950'due south style (and will decrease in value). It is important to remember to make up ones own mind about the merits or pitfalls of these changes. A guitar from any one of these sections could easily be perfect for you. Likewise, unofficial product numbers from this era indicate that production increases as nosotros progress. This implies that each succeeding era becomes more mutual.

      The Early Series are fantastic instruments with thoroughbred heritage to kicking. They are the most sought afterward of LSLPs by far. They display incomparably 50's construction throughout and offer a neat alternative to an older instance. When you hear the blanket term "1968 Les Paul" in guitar nerd conversation, it by and large refers to this era even though a expert bit of these guitars were fabricated in 1969. This is the era that Gibson chose to base their "1968 Les Paul Custom Reissues" on. They are covered in the "Current Reissues" department.

Features:

PICKUPS:

      Apropos Standard models only, P-xc pickups exclusively.


Basic CONSTRUCTION:

      Honduran Mahogany as stated in the flyer released in 1968. Maple top. One-slice mahogany neck (with two picayune carve up wings to class the holly shaped headstock) throughout this category. Eye seamed maple top throughout. Ane-piece mahogany back throughout.

      Annotation: Approximately effectually series number 535-537xxx in early 1969, a sixteenth of an inch laminate of maple appears In a higher place the standard depth 1pc mahogany back. Information technology is very difficult to see, but can exist observed in the cervix pickup cavities of Customs and Standards alike. This is the mysterious "cross-banded layer". No ane has a proficient caption for information technology as it would add time, labor, and $$$ to assembling an instrument. One of the get-go to take it, here is an image of a 537xxx guitar with a small headstock, dotted "i", and a 69-style cavity: Prototype OF LAYER


Tenon Comparison (Photoshop, not an LSLP)

Neck Articulation:

      These guitars exclusively accept a long tenon neck joint. The long tenon is commonly considered the superior technique for attaching a cervix. These examples bring the most money and are accurate to 1950 specs. (Although, 1950'due south guitars take a rounded tenon end vs. the 1960's examples having a beveled border). A long neck tenon will extend well-nigh of the way underneath the neck pickup. The neck pickup of a early reissue GT volition be directly connected to the neck tenon. Annotation: A very small number of Center Series guitars shipped with a long tenon trunk and a transitional tenon cervix. This occurred ONLY in the 565xxx and the rare 600xxx serial range. Although absent on LP Customs (for obvious reasons), LP Deluxes take a block of wood crudely glued in to fill this gap. The block allows the mounting bar for the mini-humbuckers to exist installed. Be conscientious to make certain what you are ownership. This block is occasionally glued in with care and can appear to be a long tenon.

      Notation nigh this image: This is a photoshop hack job of an Historic Serial Gibson that was cut in one-half. Information technology is just for educational purposes and non precisely similar to the actual neck joints. Thank you.

HEADSTOCK:

      The most sought after Goldtops of this era will have a 50'due south headstock design. Around serial number 53920x-53924x, Goldtops jumped to a larger sized variant. Remember, this Just affects GT's. Customs have had the larger headstock since the l's to accommodate the multi-ply binding they exhibit. Notation: GT'due south will now have the traditional 'Les Paul Model' silkscreen over the finish on the headstock. Forest veneer. Not sure what kind, simply I'k certain its forest and non plastic. No 8xxxxx series guitars will have a small headstock. (EXCEPT, peradventure the extremely rare "First Reissue" guitars. They may accept serials in the high 899xxx range. Then RARE as to be statistically insignificant.)


GIBSON HEADSTOCK LOGO:

      Earlier guitars in the run will have a dot over the "i" in Gibson, whereas later on guitars will Non have a dot. An open up 'b' and 'o'. Certainly not the smooth, all closed lettered lxx'south logo. The dot seems to disappear effectually serial 539,thirty in GT's. For Community, the cutoff is less clear. I would guess information technology to be around 539,xxx, but I have heard of a 558,xxx Custom with one. Sick analyze Customs at a later date.

1960's Logo (LEFT) vs. 1970'southward Logo (Right, non-original tuners)
'68 (upper) vs. '69 (lower)

CAVITY ROUTING:

      Guitars actually built earlier in the run (aka, shipped in 68) tend to exhibit routes with direct walls and a apartment maple flooring. (EDUCATED Guess FOLLOWS: Basically the earlier guitars had their cavities routed Before the maple cap was applied. Later guitars were routed in the traditional l's style Afterwards the maple cap was practical. This leaves a little shelf at the lesser of the cavity.) IN SUMMARY, before guitars (1968) volition have the inaccurate cavity route, whereas the later ones (early 1969 and on) will be more accurate in this respect. This alter occurs in early 1969 and remains in place for the residuum of LSLPs. The wiring channel from the pickups volition be the pocket-sized square route typical of 50'due south guitars. The square is about 3/4 of an inch on each side. It emerges in the cavity slightly farther down from centre between the pots than a 50'south guitar will. (As observed on a early 69 instance.)

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Source: http://www.latesixtieslespauls.com/early.asp

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