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EB3 Dating and authenticity

EB3 Dating and authenticity
« on: June 26, 2023, 12:49:16 PM »
Hello,
I'm new on this forum. I am located in Europe, France.
I recently found this EB3, and I'm very happy to play it.
But I wonder about the authenticity. Could you help me with the dating ? The seller said it was 1969. I have been reading quite a bit on the subject, and a few things (many things, in fact) are questionning me. The location of the jack input, the tuners, the headstock neck... I know the saddle has been replaced, and the seller gave me the original one. The serial number is difficult to read however, the certificate the seller gave me bears 918369. And the varnish on it seems different than the one on the body. The varitone seems to have been turned a quarter. I cannot see clearly if a repair took place on this guitare, the neck does not show traces. Maybe I should look at an other delicate spot on the guitare ?
If you can help me with this, it would be a great relief for me. I can take other pictures, no problem.
Have a fine day everybody
Edouard

jules

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Re: EB3 Dating and authenticity
« Reply #1 on: June 27, 2023, 12:14:45 PM »
Hi Edouard,

welcome to the forum. Yes this is a nice looking bass, and it is indeed a genuine Gibson. Construction of these slotted headstock EB basses started in late 1969 and continued up until some point in 1971. It is doubtful any shipped prior to early 1970. The earliest examples (yours is pretty early) had no 'made in USA' below the serial number. Most have 1970-dated electronics - the earliest I have seen being January 1970. So they had a short production run, but they actually shipped a lot of these over that period. Serial numbers for slotted head EB basses range from 913XXX - 999XX and then in the range 61XXXX - 69XXXX before changing to the new solid headstock design.

Have a look at the pot codes (open the control cavity) and see if you can get a date from the pots. These should have a code like 1377025 (137 = CTS, 70 = year, 25 = week of the year), which is the date of manufacture of the potentiometer.

Yours looks in good shape and pretty original. It would probably have once had a scripted EB-3 truss rod cover, and bridge cover (maybe you have that).

Hope this helps!
Jules

 

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