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I thought I had settled on my last guitar until I made the mistake of walking into the local Guitar Center. On the used wall was a pristine 5th Ave with P-90s. I had to try it out and was immediately stricken. As nice as my Ibanez is, I never liked the encased in plastic feel of the finish.
The Godin has the right feel finish wise and the P-90s are warm and sweet and dead quiet. The grain on top is a little weird but everything feels and sounds great. Now I have 2 guitars up for sale and the 5th avenue on layaway. I snapped a quick pic of the body before they put it away.
I need to stay out of music stores!
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10-31-2022 08:24 AM
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Sweet looking guitar.
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Congrats! I like the top grain. Wild cherry looks - wild.
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What I really like is the amplified tone. You can hear the wood, or what I call the organic tone, when plugged in. It is subtle but adds a nice dimension to the great sound of the P90s. I am guessing that the light finish is a contributing factor to that.
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That guitar is a modern take on ES-125, originally an entry-level student guitar and now in high esteem. It remains to be seen how the cherry laminate matures over decades.
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Originally Posted by Gitterbug
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Originally Posted by rsclosson
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
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Originally Posted by rsclosson
Also, the top is not routed for the pickups. Rather, the pickups are attached to spacers that are screwed into the top, leaving the top freer to vibrate then a routed top. The fingerboard extension sits higher above the body than on other archtops in order to leave room under the strings for the pickup (which necessitates a different neck attachment and angle …).
The whole thing — wood species, angles, component mounting, choice
of pickup, etc., is an integrated solution to the problem of making an inexpensive, but lively sounding archtop. It’s very cleverly done.
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I just saw this version of the 5th Avenue. Not a Bigsby fan, but it looks interesting...
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That is a nice guitar. I had the single pickup version years ago. I imagine the pickups in combo would cancel out any hum. However, the single pickup is very successful to ambient electromagnetic fields and can hum loudly.
I solved that problem with the EHX HumDebugger. Worked like a charm.
There is one identical to yours that has been hanging in a local guitar shop for probably 2 years. Priced about $750 iirc. I have been tempted to go in and make an offer, just haven’t gotten around to it.
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I am still considering the 1-pickup version (the Kingpin) to scratch my ES-125 itch... the necks are kind of club-by tho
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Originally Posted by John A.
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
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Originally Posted by rsclosson
Last edited by John A.; 11-01-2022 at 06:00 PM.
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I like those
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A very lovable instrument with real character and great playability.
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Originally Posted by John A.
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
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Originally Posted by John A.
My Epiphone has a single P-90 and so far have never had an issue. I must have been playing the right venues.
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That makes me miss my acoustic 5th Avenue I had some years back. They're terrific guitars.
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Originally Posted by rsclosson
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Originally Posted by John A.
EDIT: I used a noise gate and didn't like how it chopped off the tail of some notes.
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
Loar Vs. Samick (Tone Examples)
Today, 12:29 PM in The Songs