I agree with removing the poker chip also... the aulde Gibson poker chip that says Rhythm/Trouble is way retro,
(read that obsolete) from the dim dark pioneering days
back when guitars with two P-90s were new-fangled innovations just like the
Mig 17 and the F 101. Gibson designers felt that they should include some indicator
for the ignorant performer...of how this new technology should be used.
They were trying to sell these to Jazz guitarists. Rock an Roll did not exist when this
design was completed and offered for sale. Jazz guitarists were accustomed to arch top
F-hole hollow body guitars wiith one P-90... or something like that. These guys had laughed
at the Telecaster, and called it a canoe paddle or a snow shovel...
To get them to buy a solid plank of wood with two pickups, Gibson had to offer a guide as to
what the instrument was good for.
What do we need this for now? It's just more plastic junk
cluttering up your beautiful guitar. A stainless steel washer looks better, and costs very little.
You left one very important alternative out of your poll: "Keep the Pickguard if necessary to protect the top..."
This would have been my vote if it were available. Because the pickguard actually does have a useful
function... For those whose style includes heavy handed pick work with a heavy pick. Better to scratch the
plastic than to gouge your Golden Guitar.
Some performers play with bare fingers, and need no guard. Others, like me play with a light touch
and a thin pick. So I have made several pickguards out of Ebony or Walnut, and can enjoy their beauty
without scratching them much. I'd have no need of that '50s era plastic delta wing on my Les Paul, if
I owned one.
If you have to have a poker chip, get one that says Guns/Rockets
or Karen/Sharon or Angel/Devil or Sif/Freija or Hel/Valhalla
or Thor/Loki or my favorite: Bite/Sting... A good Norseman should have
a poker chip on his guitar that says Skoll/Hati... *grins
or keep it simple and say Neck/Bridge (in Norwegian)
which actually makes sense in 2018.