L6-S Custom 1973–1980 Over 12,000 L6-S Custom instruments were made. Each guitar is made out of a one-piece maple body and a three-piece
set neck, with a choice of rosewood, maple or ebony fingerboard. Finishes; Natural Maple, Ebony, Silver Burst, Tobacco Sunburst & Cherry Sunburst. A Double Cutaway Model was also available in Ebony and Maple (used by
Malcolm Young in 1975). Controls include a six-position pickup selector, master volume, mid-range and treble
roll-off controls. At the time of its introduction, the L6-S Custom was simply called the L6-S, not gaining the "Custom" badge until later, when the simpler L6-S Deluxe was introduced. The L6-S and L6-S Custom are identical. The L6-S Custom has a six-way rotary selector switch, complete with "chicken head" pointer knob. Starting with switch position #1, in the most counter-clockwise position, the available pickup switching options are as follows: • Both pickups, in series • Neck pickup, alone • Both pickups, in parallel • Both pickups, parallel out of phase, with the neck pickup's bass response restricted through a series capacitor. • Bridge pickup, alone • Both pickups, series out of phase. The capacitor in the #4 position gives a fuller tone than the otherwise very nasal out-of-phase tone. The capacitor serves to limit the low end response of the neck pickup, and also phase delays the signal from that pickup, resulting in a fuller tone, not too unlike the #2 and #4 switch positions on a
Fender Stratocaster guitar. Note that these switching options are for the original 1970s L6-S with sealed ceramic Bill Lawrence Humbuckers and are somewhat different for the 2011- reissue L6S, which use 490R/498T split coil pickup switching and different wiring.
L6-S Midnight Special 1974–1979 Some 2,000 L6-S Midnight Special instruments were produced, with maple body, and
bolt-on 3 piece maple neck with a maple fingerboard and a maple face on the head-stock. It was available in three colors: Natural Maple, Wine Red & Ebony. Controls include a pickup selector, master volume, and tone control, with a Schaller "Harmonica Bridge", it is strung through the body, with the back string ferrules burrowed into the middle of the body. The guitar was actually designated as an "L6 Midnight Special" by Gibson note; the absence of the "S". It was never advertised, or listed in the Gibson catalogs or the Gibson price listings. This first model the finish was Cream with Sparkles (on this model only; legend has it only 160 were made in this color). This was the model
Paul Stanley of
Kiss used from December 1974 to June 1975.
L6-S Deluxe 1974–1979 Around 3,500 L6-S Deluxe guitars were produced. The Deluxe had a set maple neck (some were actually Stamped "Deluxe" on the back of the Head-stock), with a rosewood fingerboard. Two "Tar Back" pickups (rating 6.4k Bridge and 5.8k in the neck) with non-standard 3 adjustment screws (one on each side and 1 in front or back) and completely unique pentagon (5 sided) Mounting Rings. Controls include a pickup selector, master volume, and tone control. Strung through the body, with a "String Plate" mounted on back instead of string ferrules. Finishes; Natural Maple, Ebony, Wine Red & Purple Sparkle. With a re-designed angled cut-away pick-guard.
Mike Oldfield used this model around 1979 for the recording of Incantations and for the tour. Later, the guitar was modified by English luthier Tony Zemaitis and the black pickguard was changed with a handmade metal pickguard. The headstock was sanded and a metal pickguard was made to cover the logo. He used the guitar to record Platinum and it can be seen at the 1980 Knebworth concert.
Prince used a natural maple model in 1978–79. Punkrocker 'Claus Danger' from the Scandinavian garage-rock scene, has been using an all black 1978 version since 1996 for both concerts and recording sessions around the world. It can be heard from many live recordings around the Danish punkrock scene, especially around the late 90s.
L6S reissue 2011–2012 Now called the L6S rather than L6-S, this is basically a re-issue of the classic L6-S Custom model, not the Deluxe version. The new guitar consists of a three-piece set maple neck and two-piece "butterfly" maple body, unlike the original L6-S, which had a one-piece maple body . Additionally, 490T/498R Alnico split-coil humbuckers are now used, a six- position switch, a standard
Tune-o-matic bridge and stop tailpiece. The neck uses Gibson construction: a maple fingerboard over the trussrod and maple neck, rather than an insert in the back of the neck like Fender maple fingerboard/necks. The 6-position switch in the original L6-S previously provided all possible connections of two pickups. Now, instead, according to the Gibson literature, the series in-phase, series out of phase, and parallel out of phase positions have been deleted in favor of 3 new split-coil positions utilizing "four-conductor split-coil wiring" resulting in these selections: bridge humbucker, bridge single coil, both single, both humbucking, neck single and neck humbucking. This provides more pleasant selections, but eliminates the previous more radical special-purpose settings of the original Bill Lawrence design. Each L6S is now setup on the Plek machine, resulting in consistently good action direct from the factory. ==References==