Learn To Upgrade Your Gibson Les Paul

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Learn To Upgrade Your Gibson Les Paul

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Many Les Paul players in the past were hesitant to drill holes in a high-end guitar, thus they avoided hardware improvements. Today, there is a wide selection of Gibson Les Paul bridge, tailpieces, tremolos, and tuners that will fit perfectly.  Here are top tips for modifying Les Pauls with guitar parts. Some are very costly while others are cheap, and many won’t cost you a thing. For replacement wrap over Les Paul bridge and ABR-1 replicas, try Wilkinson, Pigtail, Badass, Hipshot, Schaller, Gotoh, Tone Pros, Callaham and Gibson too. Visit - – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Learn To Upgrade Your Gibson Les Paul


1
Learn To Upgrade Your
Gibson Les Paul
2
Introduction
  • Many Les Paul players in the past were hesitant
    to drill holes in a high-end guitar, thus they
    avoided hardware improvements. Today, there is a
    wide selection of Gibson Les Paul bridge,
    tailpieces, tremolos, and tuners that will fit
    perfectly. You should be aware, however, that Les
    Pauls built in the US have hardware that is sized
    according to imperial standards, whereas those
    made in the Far East, such as Epiphones and the
    many Japanese lawsuit "replicas," need metric
    hardware.
  • Here are top tips for modifying Les Pauls with
    guitar parts. Some are very costly while others
    are cheap, and many wont cost you a thing.

3
Get A New Jack Plate
  • Every guitar design has its weak spots, and the
    jack plate is the Les Pauls because the slim
    plastic plate is all too easy to snap. The
    solution is simple a metal replacement. This is
    a cheap and reversible modification, but try to
    ensure the screw holes of the new plate will line
    up with the old one. If you want to keep the
    original look, simply install the plastic plate
    on top of the metal one.

4
Become A Top Wrapper
  • This is one mod you can try easily for zero cost.
    Bonamassa says it gives the guitar a slinkier
    feel and makes a set of 11-gauge strings feel
    more like a 10.5 set
  • In addition to providing an anchor point for the
    strings, the stop tailpiece ensures that the
    strings have a suitable break-angle over the
    saddles. However, when the tailpiece is screwed
    tight to the body, the angle might be too sharp,
    increasing the chances of string breakage. One
    solution is to feed the strings through the
    tailpiece from the pickup side and wrap them over
    the top of the tailpiece.

5
Swap Your Tailpiece
  • In the 1950s, Gibsons stop tailpiece was
    originally made from aluminium. Later on, this
    changed to zinc, which remains stock on many
    current models.
  • Some players claim aluminium gives extra
    woodiness and more treble with a wider dynamic
    range, while zinc fans argue that their preferred
    metal has more low end and sustain.

6
Lock Down Your Tailpiece
  • The obvious way to keep the tailpiece fixed in
    position is to screw it flat to the body. Setting
    it higher softens the break angle, much like
    top-wrapping, but the tailpiece may need to be
    secured. TonePros locking studs provide an
    effective solution
  • Traditional tailpiece studs do not grip stop
    tailpieces at all the only thing holding the
    tailpiece in position is the pull of the strings.
    Often, youll see tailpieces tilting forward, and
    its claimed that better tone can be achieved by
    fixing the tailpiece more securely. TonePros and
    Faber both offer retrofit means of getting your
    studs to grip, though the latters Tone Lock is
    the least cosmetically disruptive option.

7
Get A Nut Job
  • Much is made of the type of material used for
    nuts. Traditionalists insist on bone, some prefer
    the slippery attributes of high-tech materials
    like Graphtech, while Zakk Wylde famously prefers
    brass. Currently, Gibson installs a variety of
    nuts depending on the model, including an unusual
    zero fret device that allows player to adjust
    string height.
  • Even so, a nut can only affect the tone of open
    strings, so the main reason for installing a new
    nut would be if the slots are inaccurately cut or
    they prove to be too deep after a re-fret. For
    vintage authenticity, you might consider
    installing a 6/6 grade nylon nut. Pre-cut nylon
    nuts are available, but often at a steep price.
    Alternatively, you can buy a sheet of 6/6 nylon
    and make one up.

8
Change Your Pickups
  • Due to the way that theyre mounted,
    pickup-swapping was never a big thing among Les
    Paul players chopping Fenders was always an
    easier and less scary proposition. These days
    things are simpler and all kinds of options are
    now available for humbucker- and P-90-equipped
    Les Pauls.
  • If you want an early 50s tone, there are plenty
    of P-90s in PAF mounts or what about getting
    Gretschy with an English mount and P-90-sized
    FilterTron or DeArmond soundalikes from TV
    Jones.

9
Try Jimmy Pages Wiring
10
  • Jimmy Page used a lot of trick wiring with his
    vintage Les Pauls for out-of-phase and
    single-coil tones. Any Les Paul with two
    humbuckers is actually equipped with four
    pickups two pairs of single-coils with each pair
    wired in series. When you think about the range
    of tones you can get from a regular Stratocaster,
    its obvious Les Pauls have a lot of un-tapped
    potential.
  • Jimmy Page certainly thought so, and he had four
    push/pull switches fitted in his 1960 Les Paul.
    The push/pulls under the volume controls switch
    between regular humbucker and single-coil tones.
    The push/pull under the neck tone control is a
    series/parallel switch, and the one under the
    bridge tone control switches the pickups in and
    out of phase for Peter Green-style tones. If your
    pickups have vintage-style braided wires, theyll
    need to be replaced with multicore wires for this
    mod.

11
Install a Bigsby Without Drilling
  • Filled holes in the tops of vintage Les Pauls are
    the evidence of long-removed Bigsby vibratos. To
    some, a Les Paul with a Bigsby looks just as
    incongruous as a Gretsch without one.
    Nevertheless, we think Lesters look the nuts with
    a Bigsby and you can now install Bigsbys on Les
    Pauls without drilling any holes at all, thanks
    to a company called Vibramate.
  • A specially-designed bracket attaches in place of
    the stop tailpiece to secure the front of the
    Bigsby unit, and the strap button screw clamps it
    at the back. This do-it-yourself installation can
    be done within minutes, but youll need a fresh
    set of strings, too.

12
Replace The Bridge
  • Early 50s-style Les Pauls and Les Paul Juniors
    had wrap over tailpieces, so intonation can be
    compromised. Fortunately, wrap over replacement
    bridges with adjustable intonation are readily
    available. Vintage fans generally prefer ABR-1
    style aluminium tune-o-matic bridges with brass
    saddles to the later all-zinc Nashville bridges.
  • They can be swapped, but they require thumbwheel
    posts with a different diameter. Browns Guitars
    and Faber offer the necessary conversion posts.
    For replacement wrap over Les Paul bridge and
    ABR-1 replicas, try Wilkinson, Pigtail, Badass,
    Hipshot, Schaller, Gotoh, Tone Pros, Callaham and
    Gibson too.

13
Summery
  • There is still lots of room for customising,
    personalising, and improving your Les Paul even
    if you don't like working with wood or soldering
    irons. In general, the categories can be divided
    into hardware improvements, electrical
    alterations, and cosmetic adjustments.
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