Dave Fifield wrote:
I recently attended a lecture given by Roger Siminoff called "The Lore of Loar", about the remarkable story of Lloyd Loar including, of course, his history with Gibson (and quite a bit about Gibson itself). I know I dozed off a couple of times during the lecture and don't remember everything clearly, but I swear I heard Roger talk about some Gibson mandolin designs having deliberately offset necks and/or non-symmetric body shapes. Are you sure what you are seeing in this instrument really is shoddy workmanship?
Dave F.
Read through Arnts first link (which is the one that deals with skewed necks), these were not treated like rocket ships, and they made them fast. If the skewed neck was deliberate, i think they would have moved the block and center seam over to match.
Here is my favorite Rick Turner post from that thread- "It's really easy to read "intent" into things like asymmetry or elements being off-center when what you really should be reading in is "mistake". They did not agonize over things at the Gibson factory, and tooling was all hand made. If they could put strings on it, they did, and they shipped it. "
Dovetails in mandolins are hard to do, much harder than guitars. The cheeks need to wrap around the bulbous end of the body, requiring a lot of hand work. One extra swipe on the treble side and its off 1/4" at the tail.
I am not trying to say that they are bad instruments, i am sure this mandolin will sound and play great when it is back together, i just got a kick out opening it up and seeing that hole, i thought someone here might enjoy it.
He he he, Tony that is a new one for me.