Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup

Epiphone Les Paul – Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup

Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup
Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup Epiphone Les Paul - Bone Nut Carve, Pickup Swap and Setup

 

This is my kind of project. I often have customers ask me what upgrades are the best bang for their buck to make a guitar they’re owned for years, new and exciting. Can you guess what my two recommendations are?

Bone, is a much more dense material than any stock plastic nut and yields a brighter sound, longer sustain and overall, nicer feel when picking strings.

Similar to the stock nut, stock pickups are anything but glamorous. They tend to sound… mass-produced, converter-belt manufactured and slightly dull. But this isn’t the kind of thing you notice until you’ve seen and listened to a higher quality pickup. Depending on what sound you’re after out of your guitar, several factors play into what voicing you need in a pickup. This ranges from the amount of copper winding inside the pickup to the type of magnet utilized. (Alnico II, Alnico V and Ceramic are the choices).

It was decided to install a set of Gibson ’57 Classic Humbuckers. After that, a piece of Canadian moose bone was carved and filed down and placed on the headstock. Lastly, a set of D’Addario XL’s were slapped on and this Epiphone Les Paul was transformed from good, to great.

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