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Epiphone Casino China Vs Korea
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Casino VS Custom Shop Up for consideration is a near mint Epiphone Casino VS / Custom Shop electric guitar and case. This guitar was made in March, 2006, in the Epiphone plant in Korea. The Custom Shop Casino has now been discontinued and are becoming harder to find. This guitar is a factory second, for reasons unkown to me, and has been priced accordingly. Here is a great opportunity to pick up a beautiful sunburst Epiphone Casino in near mint condition, from thier high-end Custom Shop. CONDITION PLEASE CHECK OUT my other Guitar Gear for sale in Current eBay Auctions, and also see some of my gear that has Recently Sold on eBay. |
I've been after a casino for a while but the Korean models are commanding more than they would have originally cost new a couple of years ago. But, I had an Epiphone Lp built in Korea and now onefrom China and the Chinese one is better. I remember in the eighties when guitars made in Japan were becoming popular. At first mij gits were considered junk but Japan got the hang of it and started making and still some of the best guitars available. But, I had an Epiphone Lp built in Korea and now onefrom China and the Chinese one is better. I remember in the eighties when guitars made in Japan were becoming popular. At first mij gits were considered junk but Japan got the hang of it and started making and still some of the best guitars available. 'F' doesn't refer to 'Fine, Korea' - nor to 'Fuji-gen, Japan' - New 'F' models are made in China. This serial number system doesn't exactly tell the year - and doesn't tell the month at all. Beginning with F300000 in late 2009 used on LP Std'59/Std'60/Tribute models. Possibly the most famous Epiphone Guitar in music history, the Epiphone Casino thin-line, hollowbody archtop electric guitar is built with a traditional laminated Maple top, back and sides and solid Mahogany neck with authentic Epiphone Dog Ear P-90 Classic pickups to provide the legendary tone of the Casino made famous by The Beatles nearly 50 years ago.
PROS: Great fit and finish; fantastic neck; highly responsive and articulate P90 pickups.
CONS: None.
PRICE: $599 w/out case
The Casino has been around for decades, first brought to worldwide fame by the Beatles. Since then, Epiphone’s production has moved around the globe a few times, first from America to Japan, then to Korea and now China. While some aficionados maintain that the Korean-made Epis of the 1990s were better made than the contemporary models coming out of the brand’s Chinese facilities, this reviewer begs to differ. The production-line Casinos being produced today, in 2014, are perhaps the finest in the brand’s long history.
Fit and finish are immaculate – the binding, the fret edges, the neck contour, the pickup routing. We were incredibly impressed by the aesthetics, even more so since it came in our preferred “natural” finish. What sets the Casino apart from other 335-style guitars is its completely hollow body (no sound block here like on the Dot) as well as its single-coil pickups (as opposed to Gibson/Epi’s standard humbuckers).
▼ Article continues below ▼Those two factors alone give the Casino a lighter, more articulated tone. We greatly preferred the detail and clarity we heard when A/B’ing it against similar guitars with semi-hollow constructions and full humbuckers. Those sounded a bit muddier to us – and yes, while they had a louder output and will perhaps overdrive an amp quicker, the P90s (yes, the stock pickups) in the Casino are so incredibly versatile, we couldn’t fine a genre they didn’t fit into with ease.
The age-old problem of feedback was even a non-issue. We picked up a tiny bit of squealing just once, and never again; no need to stuff the sound holes. So all in all, if you’re in the market for a mid-range guitar that can pretty much tackle any job you throw at it, test-drive the new Casinos and fall in love like we did.
Epiphone Casino China Or Korea
FEATURES
Chinese Vs Korean
- Body: 5-ply maple with basswood top bracing
- Neck: mahogany
- Neck Joint: 16th fret, Glued-in
- Fingerboard: rosewood with parallelogram inlays and 22 medium jumbo frets
- Fingerboard Radius: 12”, 24.75” scale
- Nut Width: 1.68″
- Neck Profile: SlimTaper “D”
- Pickups: Epiphone P-90T and P-90R