NGD! (yes yes, let the snickering begin......:)

MichaelW

Well-known member
So I made it a full six weeks since I swore off buying anymore guitars......(my last purchase was my Tokai Les Paul)

This was a much less expensive guitar and something I've been eyeing for quite some time.

I've always struggled with the size of an ES335 (or anything other semi-hollow with a 16" bout)

When I bought my Eastman TM185MX (15" bout) I almost bought the 14" version (TM184MX) but I couldn't find one with a decent top and color.
They don't seem to sell a lot of the TM versions here in the US. It's also not a semi hollow but rather a true hollow body patterned after the Collings I-35.
It's got a carved solid maple top and a carved solid mahogany body. So tonally it's a bit more refined than a true ES-style guitar.

Eastman also makes a true ES style with laminated maple top. back and sides in 14" (T484) but they're scarce to find and also not inexpensive.

So aside from getting the Gibson ES339 the only other option that had my interest was the Epiphone version from their "inspired by Gibson" line.

Having had some very positive experiences with the new Epiphones this past couple of years, I watched a bunch of reviews and decided to throw an offer on one I saw on Reverb. I got a new Epiphone ES339 in natural finish from the Music Zoo for $450 shipped. Kinda hard to pass that up.

My first impressions out of the box is that this might be the nicest of all my Epiphones so far. (I've recently purchased the Firebird, the SG Special and got a Les Paul Junior last year sometime).

The next carve is the most "C" shaped and has the least amount of "shoulders" to it out of all my Epiphones. Not sure if this is how they do their 50's Les Paul necks or not but it's in that same ballpark. Like a 50's carve and very comfy to play. Not that I can't play my other Epiphones but that "D" shaped neck profile on most of them is not my favorite feature.

I decided on the Natural after going back and forth between the Cherry red and the Pelham Blue. I don't have a natural colored guitar right now, but I do have a Pelham Blue and a Cherry Red so I went with it.

Build quality is once again, very impressive. Hard to believe this is a sub $500 guitar. The fret work, fret leveling, fret dressing were all perfect and didn't need any additional work from me aside from a high polish with the Dremel.

As you'd probably expected, the first thing I did was tear it all apart and rewire it..... :ROFLMAO: .

I installed a set if Durbano Magnetics 59 PAF's in it. I think these pickups, after having been in 3 or 4 different guitars have finally found their forever home. They sounds fantastic in this guitar. The stock pickups weren't necessarily bad, but like most Epiphone pickups, they sounded muddy to me.
The Durbano 59's sound like a good set of PAF's. Lots of clarity and definition yet also has a good punch to them. They come in as a close second to my all time favorite PAF, the Wolfetone Legends.

While I absolutely detest working on wiring in semi-hollows, it was something that had to be done. Epiphone uses CTS pots on these guitars but they use Metric sized CTS's and also use B500k's in all 4 positions. Bleah. While I was building a new harness for it anyway, I also upgraded the toggle to a Switchcraft as well as the output jack.

Here's a shot right out of the box before I started my surgery.

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The Indian Laurel fingerboard looks nice. Uniform grain and on the darker side. It could definitely pass for rosewood.
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I don't have anything against Grover tuners, but I don't care for them in Gibson style guitars. I much prefer the classic look of Kluson's.
So the first thing I did was swap out the Grovers.
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I had to use "conversion bushings" to make the Gotoh Kluson style tuners work.
They required a slight bit of reaming to press fit.
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Usually on F style guitars I tap these in with a plastic hammer, but since I couldn't lay the neck flat on this guitar I used a C-clamp to press fit the bushings.
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There wasn't too much of a "halo" left from the Grover bushings that's very noticeable.
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Ahhh much better......
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There's a tiny bit of "footprint" from the Grovers showing if you look hard enough, but I think for the most part the tuner swap was a success.
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Even though the fingerboard was a decent color already. I'm still experimenting a bit with staining Laurel fingerboards. So I decided to try using finishing touchup pens on this fingerboard.
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Continued in next post....
 
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Long neck tenon....
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Having a full length center block, there's only a tiny gap for the pickup wires to run. Certainly not big enough to get a potentiometer, let alone a complete new harness in. Everything had to go through the F holes....sigh....

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Getting prepped for surgery.....
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Installed the pickups with the original black rings that came with the guitar, but I didn't like the way it looked. The rings on this guitar seems like it's "thicker" and looks funny to me. I eventually swapped them out for some cream ones. I also installed a Faber bridge and tailpiece.

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Just a wee bit of insurance.....
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I built the harness on a template I made of the holes.
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Here she is all done....
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I also took off the Graphtech nut and cut a bone nut for it.
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I like the natural mahogany color of the neck. Although it is a 3 piece neck.
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Continued in next post....
 
Well I do have a couple of last pics to post but Safari is crapping out on me. I'll try again a little later.

All in all I'm extremely happy with how this guitar plays and sounds. The Eastman is a more refined guitar both in terms of fit and finish as well as tone. But it's also a $2300 guitar. For $450 plus some change for parts, this thing is killer!
 
I like it. I think the fretboard does look better. Sometimes the Indiana laurel has a kind of greyish hue to it, almost like the brown is desaturated a bit. That's how the Indian laurel looks on my Jazzmaster. I might try the dye pen on it and see if it darkens it more.

A few years ago I had a Chinese Dot. I think at that point they had been out of the Korean factory for a while. I couldn't find any issues with it so by that point the Chinese factory knew what they were doing. It was a nice guitar, but a little hard to noodle up high on the dusty end of the fretboard so I ended up trading it for an amp. I thought the pickups sounded pretty good, but if I would have kept it I would have put 50s style wiring in it.
 
Wow. You really have a way with nuts. :-) Beautiful work. I really like what you did with the tuners - I really dislike Grover Minis. The tuners you used are much better.

I really like the stock size 335 but they are not for everyone. I find them extremely comfy as a lounge guitar. And I gigged quite a few years with a Gretsch 6120 - it felt like sitting in a big comfy armchair of a guitar. The Duojet has pretty much taken over from the 6120 for me but I can't part with the big orange guitar. It's only when I get to a White Falcon or Gibson L5 that I start to feel it might be too big. And a Super 400 is definitely too big!

A friend of mine once told me he couldn't manage a 6120 for gigs because it was too big - he much preferred his Telecaster. He couldn't play big guitars. Then I pointed out that for at least half of his gig he was playing a Gibson J45...
 
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