Stuart’s fake Les Paul Custom Plus

August 9th, 2009

A very nice flame top and gold speed knobs but alas, it is a fake. Unfortunately the fretboard is made of what appears to be rosewood, it should be ebony and the stopbar tailpiece and bridge appear to be slightly misaligned

At a quick glance this could easily pass as genuine. It is not a bad looking guitar, thought to be a Custom Plus and according to the serial number was built in 1996. The serial number is however fake and if you compare the picture of the serial number above to that of a real Gibson you can see that the font, if you like, is different.

The headstock, to those who have been over this site before, is clearly a fake, to the newer visitor it could be hard to distinguish from a genuine Gibson, (see others shown on this site for more examples, or here for the Gibson webpage on fakes). Note the angle that the Gibson logo is at as well as the shape of the headstock. The truss rod cover is also a copy and is only single ply. Both the logo and split diamond inlay should be mother of pearl, a far brighter result than the flat off white shown here.

For those handy with a screwdriver who wish to compare the insides of their Gibson to a fake, Stuart took a picture of the potentiometers, as he said so himself, “Would Gibson ever use such weedy potentiometers…and look at the wiring…doesn’t look like Gibson wiring to me.” It really doesn’t look like Gibson wiring to me either.

“Even the case is non standard…is this a genuine Gibson case with this raised embossed Gibson lettering.”  No, no it’s not

The case, as is often, er, the case with these copies is nothing like a genuine Gibson case, (usually during this period made in Canada). Late 80′s and 90′s cases tended to be the brown with pink muppet skin variety based on the 50′s Cal Girl style.

Stuart, thank you for your email and for sharing your pictures with us, I think it’s the first picture of potentiometers we’ve had on fibsons.com.

“Do you come from a land down under? Where women glow and men plunder? “

August 5th, 2009

That’s by Men At Work by the way, it’s an Australian anthem.

Glenn comes from Australia, and he sent in this Les Paul Standard, er, Custom, er, Zakk Wylde?

This many model mock up sold on eBay Australia for AU$715, I hope the buyer knew what he or she is buying in to.

Take away the ridiculous case, the dodgy pot placement and the nasty hardware, body wise it’s a flame top kind of cherry burst Les Paul Standard. The fretboard is rosewood which also points towards the Standard but the frets go over the binding, that’s a no no in the world of Gibson, (though a re-fret can explain this in some cases – but this guitar is a fake, I promise).

This guitar also has block inlays, yeah the odd Studio does this with the small blocks and maybe some brief funky Standard model with a tiny run popped out when no one was looking, but blocks, (not trapezoid) means Custom, not Standard, but Custom means an ebony fretboard, you can see this is a confusing model to pin down.

The split diamond inlay (well an attempt at one) on the headstock and the binding around it also say Custom, as does the words on the (hand shaped?) truss rod cover – two screws though, nice try guys, though not a great effort when we can see a screw hole next to it!

So, to sum up; Not being satisfied with the Les Paul Standard our forger had attempted to put  together, he/she then tried to make it a Les Paul Custom, thinking it a higher value instrument and therefore possibly implying that they are a better, ahem, craftsman and giving him/herself a desperate feeling of satisfaction. But wait, as their inferiority complex started to spiral out of control they decided they could better even the Les Paul Custom and…

They flipped around to the back of the headstock and put Zakk Wylde’s silhouette on it making this, this Franken-Paul, a Custom Shop signature model. They may have exploded with pride.

Also of note, besides the ridiculous Gibson logo, is the serial number, which is in the style of the ones started in 1977. According to the serial number this guitar was built on the 909th day of 1952 at the Nashville plant, that’s 32 years before Gibson moved to Nashville, 25 years before that serial number system existed and on a day that never comes around on any year.

Thanks for the email Glenn. Looking forward to any more you find.

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