1955 National 1155 (Gibson body) Slope Dreadnought Guitar
My buddy Brandon loves old J-45/J-50 guitars. He also loves K&K pickups (acoustic) and DeArmond soundhole pickups (electric). Thus, it makes sense that he'd buy this crazy old J-45-body National (see here and see here for two more) and have me doll it up to combine all three loves.
I'm a fan of these guitars but they do have their quirks. They feature the National-made "Stylist" (magnesium-core, bolted-design) necks and National-made bridges and between the two, the intonation is almost always off at the bridge by more than 1/8" in either direction with the "factory setup." The Stylist necks also warp a little about half the time and stay perfectly true half the time. This one was a lucky one that remained straight, more or less.
Work was a bit extensive for a guitar that essentially just needed a glorified setup and saddle-slot move to play well. It got a refret with jumbos (ohhh this feels so much better than the low original stuff), bridge work (saddle slot fill/recut, pinholes fill/redrill, etc.), new saddle, a slight mod to the aftermarket "holo-flake" Elton-brand pickguard (I recut its soundhole cutout to fit the rosette rather than leave it flush with the soundhole itself), made a new bone nut, and then fit and installed the K&K acoustic pickup and the magnetic DeArmond one. That meant adding a bridge-plate-ground (using copper shielding material) under the bridge. Two side-by-side output jacks are used. Oh, and oh... I added new strap buttons and a replacement neckplate for the adjustable gizmo.
Suffice to say, it plays like an absolute champ and sounds good through either pickup system, though I've only recorded the acoustic sound. Those are 54w-12 nickel strings, by the way -- slightly-used as they're pull-offs from anther guitar in the shop. I think that makes them nice and friendly, though.
Like many of these GibNats, the top is bellied under tension (they're too light!) and the bridge design with its stiff wings and pointy back doesn't help (because the corners always pull away from the curving of the top -- hence why they bolted the heck out of these -- 4 bolts! -- at the factory). The neck alignment also means that you need to have a pretty tall saddle installed unless you want to have a ski-jump effect at the fretboard extension (the necks were, afterall, meant for archtop guitar models to begin with). This also means the DeArmond is shimmed-up a bunch with leather pads.
Normal specs apply -- this has a solid-spruce, x-braced top, solid mahogany back and sides, a magnesium-core neck with mahogany veneer, and it's mostly-original save the saddle, bridge pins, pickguard, super-cool cardinal decal, nut, and pickups. The neck still has the typical Gibson 24 3/4" scale length.
Comments
But this one, with its sunburst, cardinal decal and fancy-pants scratch plate, is truly ready for Saturday night…