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Well, you can, but it is not going to sell.
Best to remove the pick-ups, and sell those separately.
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This. A MIK Epiphone Casino is still a MIK Epiphone Casino, even with nicer pickups. Part them out.
Don't talk politics and don't throw stones. Your royal highnesses.
Sell the pickups separately.
<ADMIN: Edited to remove potentially risky comment at poster's request>
Part them out, and you'll make better money and sell more easily.
Long drawn-out answer, the pickups will only have a small market, but if you need them then they add value to an original guitar without them, etc
An Epiphone from the '90s made in Korea will not currently be a super desirable guitar for many buyers. Purely, as there are a hell of a lot of them out there already.
I worked in a guitar store in the '90s and we sold these models consistently for years, so there are a lot of them already in the UK I would guess.
That and everyone wanted an Indie/Oasis/hollow or semi-hollow instrument for around £500 for about -5-6 years in that time period.
Post Grunge/Kurt shooting himself in the face and more Brit Pop was what the kids were buying.
Fuming that I could be so moronic and didn’t check. Fuck this.
The other side of the market is someone looking for a 90's Epi casino. They have a price range in mind and these pickups push it above that
I don't think the shop ripped you off. The value f the 2 things together is realistically £1k+ on the second hand market so more than that in a shop... but finding a buyer to pay that for the combination is not going to be quick
Instagram
"If it smells like shit...It is probably shit"
Weve all been there.
I was trying to figure out a fair price for it and went off to google. A quick search shows a past sale at a much cheaper price - I would say that is silly low price, but it was the first I found after your listings. What we don't know is when they had it for sale
https://ampguitars.com/product/epiphone-94-casino-gibson-71-p90s/
It's the same guitar even though your fretboard looks darker and body looks paler, the grain on the body is an exact match
The question now is when did you buy it, and when did AMP sell it?
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Upgrades will often make a guitar more desirable to many potential buyers, as it should improve the guitars tone/playability etc - But you won't get the back gross value of such parts - I don't think there is a guide line % of what value will/can be added, so common sense should come into play
Unfortunately it is not helpful they still have it showing without a date, as that would give important context to the displayed low price
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Jesus!
• Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@Goldeneraguitars