CoolJoMark
Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2009
- Messages
- 387
wow thanks for all the great info about the numbers..as well as the definitions of trimester and semester... what a bonus
I have a question. If I'm not mistaken (and I may be), Gibson's numbering system when the originals were produced was inclusive of all guitars produced. Not just Les Pauls or any single model of Les Paul. For example, no. 9 1980 was obviously not the 1980th Burst produced that year but it was the 1980th instrument produced overall that year. If this is right, does it still apply? Would no. 9 1980 produced in 2011 be the 980th overall instrument produced in the custom shop this particular year or the 980th R9? Could someone in the know clear this up?...:hmm
No, that original system is not used for the reissues. Each reissue year model has it's own set of numbers. So this year you have R9 serial number "9 1250" but also have R8 serial number "8 1250".
With your example in mind, does that mean that we (or Gibson, I suppose) can guarantee that there were 1249 guitars made that year before each of these examples? Do we know that they started with "9 0001" and "8 0001?" And beyond that- do we know if they did or did not skip any numbers?
1249 guitars? The serial numbers I used would be the 250th guitar made. But yes, as far as I know they go from 001 to whatever the ending number is in sequence. Sometimes for special runs they will reserve a group of serial numbers so the run is sequential. This was done for the 50th Annv. guitars. But the ending serial number for the year still represents the total number of guitars made for that model as far as I know.
Thanks...No, that original system is not used for the reissues. Each reissue year model has it's own set of numbers. So this year you have R9 serial number "9 1250" but also have R8 serial number "8 1250".
This is interesting, but in 2010 I ordered a specific serial number, and this was not my impression. But you are the expert here.