This is a well-recognized eBay seller.
Interesting story. There are some things that don't look exactly right on it .........
http://cgi.ebay.com/Gibson-Mandolin_...1%7C240%3A1318
This is a well-recognized eBay seller.
Interesting story. There are some things that don't look exactly right on it .........
http://cgi.ebay.com/Gibson-Mandolin_...1%7C240%3A1318
Last edited by Bernie Daniel; Nov-17-2008 at 7:00am.
Bernie
____
Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.
Is he referring to the Gibson factory in China?
I've taken some chances on ebay, but I think I'll pass on that one.
Mike Bloder
Gibson F-9
Hogan F-5
Without a serial number how did the Gibson factory know what it was?
"bargain instruments are no bargains if you can't play them"
--Jim Garber
Looks like an F5-G to me. What does not look right?
ok, i know the guy that has this mandolin. he owns a gun shop in my area. i looked at the mandolin and i do believe it to be a gibson. i agree that there was a feew things that puzzled me, and a few things that were "different"... but i am pretty sure it is some sort of an f5g. but of course im no expert.
07 Silver Angel Distressed F5
Rigel G-110
05 Gibson Fern
74 Gibson F5
82 Clawson F5
05 D18 Golden Era
76 D28 Sunburst
06 DG Carpathian & Mahogony
06 Blueridge BR160A
10 Little Martin LX1
and i dont now if the mandolin itself is 15 years old... but the tuners, and tail piece looked pretty recent. and the finish looked excellent. maybe it was an older one that someone at gibson repaired,, restored, or maybe even made from spare parts and presented it to a friend. ???
07 Silver Angel Distressed F5
Rigel G-110
05 Gibson Fern
74 Gibson F5
82 Clawson F5
05 D18 Golden Era
76 D28 Sunburst
06 DG Carpathian & Mahogony
06 Blueridge BR160A
10 Little Martin LX1
The world is full of instruments that have a Gibson label that never saw a Gibson factory, we have an entire thread with images of them. That doesn't mean they aren't decent instruments but stories like this are pretty common on eBay so they raise questions. I still ask the question how did Gibson know what this was without a serial number? Somebody actually remembered a single mandolin made 15 years ago?
"bargain instruments are no bargains if you can't play them"
--Jim Garber
well, what i was told is that the mandolin had been siting around the shop for 15 years.... it was only given away in 2007. or at least thats what the man who had it and what the label said. i played it. It looked, played and sounded like an f5g. I have owned 5 or 6 of them and a couple of ferns. Its just hard to say for sure.
07 Silver Angel Distressed F5
Rigel G-110
05 Gibson Fern
74 Gibson F5
82 Clawson F5
05 D18 Golden Era
76 D28 Sunburst
06 DG Carpathian & Mahogony
06 Blueridge BR160A
10 Little Martin LX1
I like that burst on the back. They usually are stained dark on the regular F5G's.
I Pick, Therefore I Grin!
1918 Gibson A4
2006 Gibson F5 Goldrush
2011 Martin HD-16R LSH
You smell somethin?![]()
Gibson does not like one offs/prototypes leaving their factory
the usually destroy them
that's right
destroy them
chop them up
in little pieces
this is probably a fugitive from that pogrom
oops
did i misspell program?
more power to the little guy for escaping and getting to live a life of music![]()
haha, so true
im behind times... i just then realized people were posting under their real names
07 Silver Angel Distressed F5
Rigel G-110
05 Gibson Fern
74 Gibson F5
82 Clawson F5
05 D18 Golden Era
76 D28 Sunburst
06 DG Carpathian & Mahogony
06 Blueridge BR160A
10 Little Martin LX1
I guess if anyone has any serious questions they can call: 276-708-6021.
That's the number the fella put in the item description.
There were no mandolins hanging around the factory for fifteen years. Gibson did not even have the OAI division fifteen years ago. All mandolins at that time were made in Bozeman Montana and not in Nashville. It appears to be a far more recent F5G and I see nothing special about this mandolin, or collectible. It even has Schaller tuners which have not been used for some time. It may well have been a mandolin returned to the factory for warranty replacement and been repaired and given as an artist deal. I have no knowledge of this particular mandolin, but that is far more likely than the story presented in the e-bay article. It certainly is no more collectible than any other F5G. That does not mean it is not a nice mandolin, just nothing special. The serial number is probably missing because the label is missing. Whether by design or it just fell out, who knows? Anyway, that is the likely case for this mandolin.
Have a Great Day!
Joe Vest
In the Gadsden area about 15 years ago, I found a lefty Deering banjo, and I let a friend know about it. He ended up buying it and found it didn't have a serial number, so he called the company. After being put on hold and talking to several secretaries, he gets a "Hello, this is Greg Deering."
My buddy described it, no serial, and Mr. Deering said that it had been one of three made in 1984 (1985 - can't remember which). He ended up giving him tons of info about.
...So you never know.
But, hey, if it sounds good...pick it.
Valley Road Bluegrass Band
www.valleyroadbluegrass.com
I thought "The Gibson" script look a little flakey. Also the close up of the fingerboard extension looked too short? I guess the story itself seemed not credible?Tom C: Looks like an F5-G to me. What does not look right?
Bernie
____
Due to current budgetary restrictions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off -- sorry about the inconvenience.
If I had to guess I'd say 20 years ago Greg Deering probably had a staff of two, he and his wife. I'd hazard a guess that there aren't a whole lot of people building mandolins at Gibson that were there 15 years ago. Big Joe says nothing hung around for 15 years, I'd say Joe's other explanations are probably right if in fact it is a Gibson.
"bargain instruments are no bargains if you can't play them"
--Jim Garber
I found this link to a wikipedia article on Dempsey Howard, in Nashville and a gospel singer, the plot thickens. . .
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dempsey_howard
yeah, if anyone was interested in this mando, id say just call the guy. i talked to him about it face to face. it sounded like a solid story to me... the only thing i wondered about was the part of it being in the shop for 15 years... it did have the more recent tuners and tail piece like big joe stated. i figured it was an artist endorsed mando. but just a guess
07 Silver Angel Distressed F5
Rigel G-110
05 Gibson Fern
74 Gibson F5
82 Clawson F5
05 D18 Golden Era
76 D28 Sunburst
06 DG Carpathian & Mahogony
06 Blueridge BR160A
10 Little Martin LX1
I imagine the seller is telling something of a big fish tale in order to move this item. Like all such stories, the details get a stretched and blurred at little bit more every time the story is repeated or passed on.
Would Gibson take back a mandolin from one of its dealers if it had been lying around their shop for a few years (3..no 5 ... no 15 years, thats the ticket!), and then give it away as an artist deal or whatever?
I agree there's something fishy about this deal. I guess the seller wants to brighten up the add......
As for one-of's and no mandolins made in nashville 15 years ago, I have a F5 made by Jim Triggs he made for Doyle Lawson in '89 if i'm not mistaken. I believe it was made in Nashville when Jim worked in the custom shop.
I'm looking for more information if any can help.
jjm
Why not contact Jim Triggs? Here is the link to his contact information in the Builders Database.
"bargain instruments are no bargains if you can't play them"
--Jim Garber
Mike, already did. He told me as much as he remembered, suprisingly it was a lot considering 19 years ago. But it suprises me when I hear no instruments were made in Nashville at that time. As Jim put it, he made this himself so if production wasnt in place in Nashville Jim did it alone.
Well, they didn't always, and there are a lot of colorful stories...
Here's my fav.
I'm at a party in a certain town that will remain nameless, and--low and behold--the potato chip bowl was a J-200 (or as we like to call it, a "J-Too-Expensive") with the top ripped off...
Seems there were a few Gibson employees in the crowd, and that was something that got fished out of the dumpster...
I later played that guitar, after a friend of mine rescued it from potato chip duty and put a nice Engelmann top on it...
Don't know if it had it's serial number....![]()
Why would anyone ruin a perfectly good tater chip bowl by turning it into a J-200?!
John Hamlett
www.hamlettinstruments.com
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