So, back in my youth I used to frequent a large store here in Minneapolis that specialized in liquidating inventory from other businesses/manufacturers,and one day their sign outside said something to the effect of "Zillion's of $$ in musical instruments this week". Being a bargain shopper, I had to check it out and I found they had a bunch of gear in big piles in the basement. Among the piles were a number of Jackson and Charvel guitars (literally stacked on top of eack other - many uncased) and a BUNCH of Jackson amps. There were piles of necks, bodies, and completed guitars without hardware, and a few inside cases that were complete. I opened a bass case and there was a WWII Bomber graphic never played. The next case had a San Dimas Reissue in it with a HUGE chunk missing, but otherwise complete. I looked around and found nothing priced reasonably so I left. These items were sold off slowly over the next several weeks and there are still Jackson amps all over town here(I have owned 3 personally), but one thing the guitars had in common was a small "W" stamped on the fingerboard after the serial #, or on the ones with the # elsewhere, the "W" was all by itself. I asked the store manager where this stuff came from and was told it was from the Manufacturer and they were sold off because the whole lot had been exposed to water ("W" = water? wholesale?). Anyone have some of this "W" stuff, or have another explanation? The reason it came to me to ask is I just bought what I think is a JJ model that has the "W", and I would like to know if there is any other explanation.
Thanks. Z
Thanks. Z
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