bryvincent
Senior Member
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2008
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Gibson would work on it again. Another re-board with Baked Maple, Firebird X Electronics and Robot Tuners!









So Peter is going to play at the Beacon Theater and other places on the east coast. I say we go see him.
I cannot explain yours, but I have yet to see a picture of a mid 53 and up Les Paul without a SN, except for a refin or repair. 1952s do not have SN. I have no idea why your 56 does not have a SN. As far as different body sizes and neck angles, I am sure that is very possible. If you have ever worked in a factory, you know that there are many variations that are not on spec.
Sorry you feel that way, but the fact of the matter is the burden of proof is on you, not us. We are not the ones making the claim that this is a famous guitar, you are.
Whether or not it's true (and again, I hope it is), the fact is all you have given us is your statement that this is Frampton's guitar. Not a lot for us to go on, is it?
In the world of guitar, particularly vintage guitars, there are a lot of folks out there trying to say they have something they don't. That goes double for famous guitars.
Not saying you are in any way dishonest, but unfortunately in your position, you are just going to have to deal with skepticism. Just the way it is.
A question:
For 40+ years it has been said that Frampton's guitar is either a '54 or a '55 - this was repeated by Gibson after inspecting the guitar last month.
From #17:
My first question to him was . are you certain that the lost guitar was a 1954 Gibson ? Because we found a 1957 guitar. And he said yes i could be one from 1957.
AFAIK the 3 different inlays occurred in only from parts of 1960 to today. There are variations, to be sure, but I don't think 3 different inlays is a 1957 feature.In that time (1970) nobody bothered with dates. If you look closely at the pictures from that time you can see that the last three inlays are different Just as a 1957 one should be.
There's a very clear pic of the neck pickup cavity in a previous post showing the "step" of the original P-90 rout. 1957 Customs wouldn't have said step, because they were routed for HBs, so you would see the neck tenon just like any other '57 LP.From #17:
Mark Mariana thought it was from 1954, but in fact it was from 1957.
I personally emailed with mister Peter Frampton. My first question to him was . are you certain that the lost guitar was a 1954 Gibson ? Because we found a 1957 guitar. And he said yes i could be one from 1957.
In that time (1970) nobody bothered with dates. If you look closely at the pictures from that time you can see that the last three inlays are different Just as a 1957 one should be.