 How do You like Yours ? Are these made in USA ? They are priced quite nicely at thomann.de (german megamusicstore). Just under 1500 euros.... Ooh it is so cool looking
 How do You like Yours ? Are these made in USA ? They are priced quite nicely at thomann.de (german megamusicstore). Just under 1500 euros.... Ooh it is so cool looking   
  http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/F ... 0Presents/
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
 How do You like Yours ? Are these made in USA ? They are priced quite nicely at thomann.de (german megamusicstore). Just under 1500 euros.... Ooh it is so cool looking
 How do You like Yours ? Are these made in USA ? They are priced quite nicely at thomann.de (german megamusicstore). Just under 1500 euros.... Ooh it is so cool looking   
  tonelab2, big thanks for the info ! You really have been trough lots of 335'stonelab2 wrote:Worked on a few for a local guitar tech when he was busy. Needed solder joints reflowed on them and 1 or 2 had dicky switches. Same with new BBking 345s. Overall real nice guitars and more meat on the necks help with sustain and tone. If you get a chance try out the '58 or '59 reissue (can't remember which model they call it) with the big fat neck. Accousticaly the best 335 I've ever played for tone and sustain ( I've owned 3-4 dozen 335s over 35 years and played 100s).
Bottom line the 339 is very nice but play the '59 reissue before you pull the trigger is the best advice I can offer.
 
 
This is the first guitar I'm buying without test playing it firstI went to Guitar Center first and played one... brand new right out of the box. I thought I wanted the 59 neck, but after I played that one I decided against it. The 30/60 neck was plenty fat and really nothing like the thin neck on the SG I used to play.
 Allthough I can send it back if it is not what I want it to be. I've built around 10 guitars and I have learnt to like fat necks. They DO sound much better than thin ones.
  Allthough I can send it back if it is not what I want it to be. I've built around 10 guitars and I have learnt to like fat necks. They DO sound much better than thin ones.I've been reading too for some of the 339's to need little setup work but also others that was working ok right out of the box. I also read how someone wanted to turn few bridge saddle bits other way around and then the string does not go in the middle of the pole pieces of the pickup because the slot is not in the center of the bit. Maybe this might be the case on Your guitar, I don't know.My guitar had been originally sold from a Chicago area Guitar Center and apparently had never been played and certainly had never been setup. I had to tighten up the truss rod a bit and let the bridge down a few turns but it all dialed in pretty easy and sounded great from the beginning. The neck pickup really needs a different bezel because it just doesn't sit parallel to the strings. That hasn't hurt the tone but it kinda seems like they missed something over there in the design or QC department.
That is good to hearIt has a bigger mid range than my Les Paul and yet is plenty bright on the bridge pickup when I need some high end bite.
 
 I know someone who does quarantee work for the gibson custom shop guitars and the thing is that also the expensive models has too many problems in them.It's a great guitar and really well made although I would say that Gibson would really do themselves a favor by doing a little setup work, especially if they are going to send them off to Musicians Friend or Guitar Center.
I'm thinking it just doesn't seem right for metal work, mostly because it just doesn't look the part. It does make you look like you've got the right guitar if you're trying to come off as a jazz, blues, or pop player. Definitely goes well with my prematurely gray hair.
 
   
   
  I'm very happy with it now after I adjusted few things (actually almost everything there is to adjust
  I'm very happy with it now after I adjusted few things (actually almost everything there is to adjust   ) with it.
  ) with it. 
 
Thanks BL for the answer. Actually I know how the treble bleed works. I've added it to couple of my D-builds. The mystery part is that I cannot locate the cap or cap+resistor. I mean if it is not on the volume pot where can it be then ? I asked for the schem from Gibson support but haven't got an answer yet. I would very much like to try the bridge PU without the cap (if there is anyBlind Lemon wrote:Do a search on "Treble Bleed" and see if something comes up. What it does is as you turn the Volume pot down it doesn't get muddy at lower volume. I've put them on a couple of guitars of mine. Couple of Strats. SOme use just the cap.
Ahh, don't do a search read this.
http://www.guitarnuts.com/wiring/volpass.php
BL
PS I edited the DO to Do.......I didn't want anyone to think I was being mean or yelling.
 )
 )PS I edited the DO to Do.......I didn't want anyone to think I was being mean or yelling.
 One can never be too carefull these days
  One can never be too carefull these days  
This was pretty similar to what I found, Gibson really needs to figure this out. If they are not going to run a reasonable setup, GC will not do anything to make them better. What is potentially a great guitar comes across as a factory defect. Why bother to put that "CUSTOM SHOP" decal on it when it's an unplayable mess?Blind Lemon wrote:Went to GC to play one, they only had 1, a Red one. Looked nice, lighter than a LP (what isn't). Dude handed it to me and I gave it back without even putting a pick to it. It wasn't a bad set-up, it was like someone tried to screw it up......you should have seen the bow in the neck.......strings were a mile from the neck. I just looked at the dude and he shrugged and said they don't get around to setting all of the guitars up. But, "we've really got a guy interested in this one." I told him I hope the neck isn't totally screwed buy the time he buys it. Thats the bad thing about being in a one dealer town.
BL