Which Guitar ( S) Of Yours Did You Buy After Just Seeing It? No Trying It Out, Just By Looking, Decided.

With the advent of Reverb & eBay in the past couple of decades - and the concurrent demise of most independent music stores - I've made a number of purchases without playing them first. It's something I'd never have considered decades ago. Always was a big believer in playing a bunch of the same model and choosing the ones that felt lively and spoke to me. But things are the way they are and the luxury of playing in person seems to be practical only seldom, especially when it comes to older and used instruments.

Years ago I bought a number of Japanese-made LP types from the 70s, 80s and 90s. Went on kind of a binge when I discovered how affordable they were relative to the build quality. (And back then I could still deduct my equipment purchases.) MIJs were still sleeper gems at the time; you could get an awful lot of guitar for a couple hundred bucks. Over the course of a couple years - mostly on eBay, but a couple on music forums - I bought these:

'77 Greco LP Custom. The owner had installed hot Duncan Distortion pickups, so it needs different amp settings from my other guitars. Still, once in a while I enjoy having a high output axe to play with.


Mid-80s Burny LP Custom. (These are hard to date accurately.) The pickups are original, but the previous owner put 'cutout' covers on them.


'96 Orville LPS-Q. Quilt top model in special order raspberry, with matching headstock & gold hardware. Made without a pokerchip or a pickguard, hallmarks of custom order builds from the Terada factory. I've seen red ones, but never saw another in raspberry.


'98 Orville By Gibson LPS-80 in faded orange drop. Previous owner put a Gibson headstock overlay on it and installed Sheptone pickups, which sound great. According to the serial it was built by FujiGen in August '98, making it one of the last ones made under the Orville brand. I named it Unburst.


Also got this 1980 Tokai Silver Series Strat for $175. No case, but a cool guitar nonetheless, All original. I dig the 70s style headstock.


I bought this Gibson years after those others, but it too was a mailorder. It's an '04 Tradtitional Plus. Very bright natural voice; its stock BurstBuckers sounded thin and impossibly harsh. Dimarzio AT-1 at the bridge and an Air Norton (wired parallel) in neck position fattened it up & filled in the mids.
 
1981 curly maple top (looks flame to me but...) Explorer with Kahler. Reverb.

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How do you like that stud-mount Kahler?
 
My...
Les Paul Traditional
Les Paul Classic
Fender Telecaster Deluxe (one of two, the other I got in the shop)
Fender Stratocaster (one of two, the other I got in the shop)

There have been others over the years, but those are the four that I currently have that were bought online.
I have never had to send back one back, guess I am either lucky or not that picky.
 
My...
Les Paul Traditional
Les Paul Classic
Fender Telecaster Deluxe (one of two, the other I got in the shop)
Fender Stratocaster (one of two, the other I got in the shop)

There have been others over the years, but those are the four that I currently have that were bought online.
I have never had to send back one back, guess I am either lucky or not that picky.
Pics! Pics!
 
The one in the upper middle probably cost as much as all my LPs.
Good eye Sap.

That’s my most expensive guitar purchase to date. It’s a 2023 Private Stock I bought new. I watched it on Reverb for about 2 months. Had a good day in the stock market and thought WTH. Called the shop in FL and worked out a good deal, 25% off MSRP, free shipping (he sent it overnight), no tax since I’m in CA, and he threw in 3 sets of strings, a strap, cord, and an ebony slide. The case is a work of art too.
 
At this point i've probably bought many more instruments after just seeing them online
than i have after playing them (i tend to choke when i'm trying out instruments in a shop
so i don't enjoy the experience most of the time because i feel like i'm being judged).
Starting off with mostly known quality guitars and basses and being able to tweak setups
to my liking makes this a much less iffy proposition, and i also try to buy from sellers that
have a liberal returns policy.
A while back i bought a Squier Mini P-Bass from Sweetwater, and it had a defective pickup.
i was able to exchange it for an Ibanez GSRM20; not only was the process painless, but i
got a better bass in the end: an extra fret which came in handy for a piece i was working on,
and an extra pickup. In fact the Ibby was my only bass with P/J configuration for some time,
and it is still one of my favourite basses to play and record with.
i think i've been pretty lucky in this regard.
 
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