Graffiti62
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- 658
When I visited home during my birthday, I stopped at Guitar Center (mainly for the reason it was the one store where the wife refused to come into), and I found a guitar I really liked--a Gibson SG Classic with P-90s and the 50s neck. Sounded great through a Fender Twin Reverb Reissue, but I saw something that kind of suprised me. I guess I never paid an insane amount of attention to it before, but I was suprised to see Gibson not extending their frets over the binding. Instead, the frets are chopped short of the end of the fretboard, and the binding itself is used to cover the ends of the frets before they reach the end of the side of the neck. I've noticed this even on older ones as I looked through eBay. I always thought removing the tang and finishing the frets over the binding was a sign of quality lutherie work. To me, this seems like it'd make repair work a pain, as you would not be able to trim the fret right on the neck, and you would have to mind the binding bumps when you level. Who's right on this, me or Gibson?