PEAVEY T-60 Vintage 1981 Black + OHSC Blade PUs 49855
Description
You're looking at a vintage 1981 Peavey T-60 guitar in black finish. Solid 40 years vintage. Comes with the original Peavey hard case. A real player with some battle scars and tons of mojo. Fourth year of production and has the "blade" pickups. Thin, all maple neck with frets in surprisingly good shape. Only some mild, even flattening and some very small grooves just beginning. If you know T-60s, then you know, they often have frets much worse off than this. Weight is very nice at 8 pounds, 6 ounces. (Many T-60s I've had are up to 11 pounds!)
Cosmetically, the guitar is rough with dings and scuffing on back (see photos below). Sorry, I can't show every little mark on the guitar. Just know overall it is a player cosmetically. Functionally, it's in great shape. Plays well all over the neck and the electronics work like they should. In fact, the pickups on this T-60 sound better than most. The pickups are way fat and warm. All parts are original minus one volume knob and one switch, which have been replaced. If you look closely you'll see the plastic pickup frames have some pieces missing but it does not affect the functioning of the guitar or pickups in any way.
I do a full cleaning and setup on all guitars. (Details on my setups and packing at bottom of listing.) Thanks for looking!
TONE:
The nice thing about the T-60 is how versatile its tone palette is. You can go from thin Tele jangle to big fat rock distortion with the flip of a switch or turn of a knob. There's a reason these are still sought after guitars.
What You Get
-- Full setup, cleaning, and new strings.
-- FREE USA shipping.
-- 30-day return policy.
-- Ship within 1 business day--pro packing.
Guitar Setup
All setups are done by our in-house luthier. Setup includes new strings (9s or 10s depending on what the nut is cut for), overall polish, cleaning any gunk off fingerboard, oiling neck, and polishing frets when necessary. We spray out any pots that are noisy, turn the truss rod (if necessary) and set string height at low-to-medium action depending on string buzz present. Since setup is highly subjective you may need to get it set to your particular needs by your personal luthier. Basses get the same treatment minus the string change. Thanks!
Packing
I use quality boxes, thick bubble wrap, and peanuts to pack guitars. I have a very high rate of successful guitar and bass shipping (meaning few damaged instruments). I have been doing this 10 years and know how to pack well--with or without a hard case. I wrote a detailed story with photos on how I pack a guitar, which you can find on my StillKickinMusic site blog. If you Google "THERE IN ONE PIECE...How to Pack a Guitar" you will find it. Thanks.