Gibson CS-336

The Gibson CS-336 is a semi-hollowbody electric guitar manufactured by Gibson Guitar Corporation's Custom, Art & Historic Division ("CS" is an abbreviation for "Custom Shop"). Introduced in 2001,[1] the CS-336 was the Custom Shop's first "tonally carved" guitar, meaning that the back, center block, and sides are carved from one single piece of wood (mahogany). This solid block of wood is mated to a carved maple top. After over 100 years, the CS-336 also represented the realization of company founder Orville Gibson's goal to produce an instrument with one-piece back-and-sides construction.

Gibson CS-336
ManufacturerGibson
Period2001 — present
Construction
Body typeSemi-hollow
Neck jointSet
Scale24.75"
Woods
Bodytonally carved mahogany
Neckmahogany
Hardware
BridgeFixed
Pickup(s)2 Humbuckers
Colors available
Various ("Tangerine Burst" pictured)

The CS-336 is a scaled-down version of another Gibson guitar, the Gibson ES-335.

In 1996, Gibson's Custom Shop introduced the ES-336 ("ES" is an abbreviation for "Electric Spanish"). The ES-336 had a one-piece mahogany back and a contoured maple top. When the CS-336 was introduced five years later, it added the center block and top bracing as an integral part of the back and top pieces (the final step in creating a tonally carved instrument).

ES-335: Introduced in 1958 and the key shape basis for all models listed below.
ES-336: Introduced in 1996, this model was replaced by the CS-336 in 2001.
CS-336: the subject of this article; Gibson's first "tonally carved" guitar.
CS-356: constructed in the same manner as the CS-336, with a range of "upscale" appointments such as gold-finished hardware.
ES-339: same shape as the 336 and 356 models, but not a tonally carved instrument - it has the laminated maple top, maple centerblock, and spruce contour bracing construction of an ES-335. This combination makes the ES-339 a lighter and less expensive guitar than the CS-336. The neck profiles on the CS-336 and ES-339 also differ. The ES-339 offers either a 1959 neck profile (a rounded, chunkier neck) or a slim 30/60 neck.

CS-336 features

Each CS-336 is adjusted by one of Gibson’s Plek machines before it leaves the Custom Shop. Key features of the CS-336 include:

  • An overall body size that is 13 inches wide, 16 inches long, and 1 11/16th-inches deep.
  • Two Gibson ’57 Classic humbucking pickups
  • Gibson two-tone pot, two-volume pot, a three-way selector switch control configuration and ABR-1 bridge
  • Nickel hardware
  • Single-ply binding on body’s top and back
  • One-piece mahogany neck with 22-fret rosewood fingerboard
  • 24.75" scale length, 1 1116-inch-wide (43 mm) nut.[2]
gollark: ++delete <@102038103463567360> FOR UTF-16 USE ÅAAAAAAAAAÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆA
gollark: NO UTF-16
gollark: NO!
gollark: Weird thing to have exæms on.
gollark: *En*coding?

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-08-29. Retrieved 2010-03-31.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. http://www2.gibson.com/Products/Electric-Guitars/Archtop/Gibson-Custom/CS-336/Features.aspx
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.