Here’s a weird one. You don’t see many of these SJ Deluxes, especially with an original black guard, and this one has an odd history. About 30 years ago, this guitar came to me in bad shape (but free)… neck needed to be reset, bridge cracked and lifted, sunken top due to pickguard shrink. I brought it to Joe Pichkur an incredibly experienced and talented repair guy, on Long Island, NY and he said it was a “Bargain” guitar based on the very faint BGN stamped on the back of the headstock. He told me he could try his best to repair it, but no guarantees since it started life as a reject and the neck joint was in bad shape.
Apparently, in the 70s Gibson would allow employees to buy or take guitars from a reject bin, if they didn’t pass inspection. Being the Norlin era, I guess there were quite a few that made it all the way through to a finished level of build. These guitars were “bargain” guitars and were never meant to be sold.
Long story short, I put a couple hundred into this double X braced Norlin Gibson acoustic as a gamble, not knowing if it would be worth it. Neck reset, new bridge, new nut. Held off on a refret (my mistake) as it would have added more to the gamble. When it was done, it played fine (despite the super flat 70s frets) but always sounded a little “choked”. While it could still get the Gibson thump and chug, it was very quiet and very mid scooped. It’s been this way for 30 years and I always accepted it as that’s what it was. Basically, an OK acoustic that just happened to be an older Gibson. Giggable, so I’ve held onto it, but not my first choice to grab.
Fast forward to this weekend, when I decided to fit a taller bone bridge saddle in hopes of improving some volume. While I had the strings off, I decided to peek inside just to make sure nothing weird was going on. Sure enough, one of the x braces was cracked. I’m sure this has happened as a result of the pickguard shrinking and sinking the top with it. I glued and clamped the split and looks like it’s a good fix.
Strung it up and I’m not sure if it’s the new taller saddle, fixing the brace or a combination of both, but suddenly, it’s like a new guitar. Volume and tone surprisingly improved. The action is pretty high in the upper register, but had I known a taller bridge would have made this kind of difference, I would have done it years ago. Some of this is new strings, but I’ve put new strings on this guitar before and know what it sounds like.
One other thing I noticed was that the bridge plate is pretty worn with mishaped string holes. I found a couple of thin pieces of what appears to be spruce that I could fashion a patch out of. I know it’s not the ideal way to fix this, but making wood plugs and redrilling is more trouble than I need right now. Question is, do I glue the patch, then drill or align and mark the holes on the patch, drill, then glue it in?
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