Very mild crack starting to form on the checking near where the neck bolts on (please see photos). This is very mild and does not effect playability and is typical for most laminate hardtops of this era. Otherwise this guitar is damn near immaculate for being more than 50 years old. Theres a chance its a 1971 but we cant say for sure. We know its not a 72 or later as thats when the name changed to EA-250
This is a great sounding and playing guitar.
Comes with hard shell case not pictured here.
Epiphone 5102T / EA-250 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1970 Epiphone 5102T
Manufactured and sold from 1970 to 1974 or '75 in the United States under the brand Matsumoku also manufactured the nearly identical guitar and several related guitars sold under the Univox brand.
, the owner of since the late 1950s, abandoned manufacturing of Epiphone-branded instruments in 1969 and started importing Epiphone-branded instruments from the company in 1970. These instruments were not based on previous Epiphone or Gibson designs.
The 5102T was among these first imported Epiphone instruments. It came in one color—redburst, had a maple laminate body (nearly hollow: just a 3/4" square block from top to bottom below the bridge), maple , two pickups with black plastic covers and "staple" poles alongside screw poles, and a vibrato operating similarly to a vibrato.
Subsequent years brought changes: the pickups became more like Gibson pickups and gained chrome covers, a trapeze tailpiece became available, the "pitchfork" Epiphone logo was added to the pickguard—and, in 1972, the model designation changed to EA-250. In the same period Matsumoku also made a companion short-scale bass, the 5120 / EA-260. In 1975 or '76 the guitar was replaced by the ET-255. In addition to the change from the original black plastic dual-coil Humbucker pick-ups, this guitar was altered into the EA-250 Riviera, and re-introduced with single coil pick-ups covered with the standard two coil Humbucker pick-up covers. This was a unique element on this guitar model. To identify the style, you can look at the paper label glued inside the body of the guitar under the top f-hole. It should read EA-250 Riviera Epiphone Kalamazoo, Michigan Made in Japan. The paper is light blue in color on an authentic model, and the serial number is on the back metal neck plate. It is not possible to determine the exact year of these guitars, but it is generally accepted that the Matsumoku factory built these guitars between 1970 and 1975.
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| Listed | 4 years ago |
|---|---|
| Condition | Excellent (Used) Excellent items are almost entirely free from blemishes and other visual defects and have been played or used with the utmost care.Learn more |
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