Epiphone Casino Coupe Electric Guitar

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zZounds Gear Experts Say...
Slick as a sports car, the compact-bodied Epiphone Casino Coupe delivers big, biting tones from its P-90 pickups and resonant hollow body.

What's special about this item?

Feature: What it does:
Laminated maple top/back/sides Even tone with good sustain
Mahogany neck Great sustain, strength, and warm tone
Alnico P-90T and P-90R dog-ear pickups High-output single-coils; biting treble response
Pau Ferro fretboard Delivers strong midrange presence and punch

The Epiphone Casino Coupe is the legendary Casino reborn in an ES-339 body size. It's a racecar-sized, super slick coupe version of the legendary hollowbody that has been a favorite of tone connoisseurs from Keith Richards to The Beatles, to Gary Clark Jr.

This guitar has all of the Casino's trademark tone features -- from neck size to tonewoods to pickups -- but in a "Coupe" size for easy travel. Now you can play the legendary archtop in a smaller size without a smaller sound.

Classic Casino Form

The Casino Coupe's body and top are made from 5-layer laminated maple with a single layer of ivory binding on the top and back. The Mahogany set neck has the classic 24.75" scale with a 1960s SlimTaper shape, patterned after prime vintage models. It's comfortable for hours of play and for smooth transitions between rhythm and lead. At the top of the neck is the '60s-style sloped dovewing headstock with a 14-degree angle for great intonation. The pau ferro fretboard has parallelogram pearloid inlays with a 12" radius and 22 easy-to-play medium jumbo frets.

The Heart of the Casino: P-90s

Like the original Casino, the Casino Coupe has full-size, full power "dogear" P-90s. With a full, rounded tone, the P-90 is an "all purpose" pickup, capable of sharp lead tones, clean rhythm punch, and gritty, controllable feedback. By combining this sound with the pure hollow body of the Coupe, a guitarist can achieve almost acoustic tones at low volume.
The Coupe has Epiphone-designed and read more made P-90 pickups in the lead and rhythm position with standard top hat volume and tone controls. The archtop's all-nickel hardware includes the LockTone Tune-O-matic bridge and a Coupe-sized trapeze tailpiece.

Features:

- Casino features in hollowbody 339 body shape
- Full-size P-90 "dogear" pickups
- 5-layer Maple body and Mahogany neck
- 1960s SlimTaper mahogany set neck
- Pau ferro Fretboard
- LockTone Tune-O-Matic bridge
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- Body: Laminated maple; 5-layer
- Top: Laminated maple; 5-layer
- Neck material: Mahogany
- Neck shape: 1960's SlimTaper
- Set neck
- Scale length: 24.75"
- Pau ferro fretboard
- Parallelogram inlays
- Fretboard radius: 12"
- Frets: 22; medium/jumbo
- Neck pickup: Epiphone P-90R
- Bridge pickup: Epiphone P-90T
- Controls: 1 - neck volume, 1 - neck tone, 1 - bridge volume, 1 - bridge tone
- Pickup Selector: 3-way Epiphone toggle
- Hardware: Nickel
- Bridge: LockTone Tune-O-Matic
- Tailpiece: Coupe trapeze

For support or warranty questions, please contact the manufacturer:
Phone: 800-4GIBSON
Web: https://www.epiphone.com/en-US/Support/Contact

Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 5 out of 5 stars. (16 ratings)
Submitted June 11, 2022 by David G

"Thoughts after 7 months of playing:"

Overall: 5 out of 5 stars
(see rating details)
Love this guitar! Punches far above it's class, but you'll need to probably tweak a few things first.Instead of starting out with what I love, everyone does, here's the cons I had:Frets needed a little leveling. Not much...but three did, which for a guitar in this price range isn't bad. But one was noticeable right away, the other 2 frets I probably would have wouldn't noticed until I really got in there with a detailed setup. I can dress and level frets, so this isn't an issue with me at all, if you can't take that into consideration. One tuner needed to be replaced. The high E tuner had about an 1/8 of a turn's worth of slack before engaging....but it held tune just fine. I have spares...again for me no big deal, YMMV. The nut cut is cut a little high, but it's still within the norm. Bridge rattle...well if you've ever owned an Epi or Gibson you expect this. It annoys me so the bridge was replaced. For new buyers of an Epi, it's only heard when played unplugged, you won't hear it thru the amp.The pros:I bought this guitar strictly to put a pair of Lollars I have into another older Casino. I've got a very well made '95 MIK from the Pearless era...and the nut width of the guitar is way too narrow to comfortably play. This neck is fairly beefy. If you've played a Les Paul with the 60's taper for example, the D shape will be more of a handful but isn't a baseball bat at all.The build on this guitar over all is the equal to what it's replacing. The finish is flawless. The original read more wiring and pickups were good. I did play the stock pickups for a week...they sound good. I like lower output P-90's, these are a little hotter but still sound good. The smaller body seems to feedback a little less.The smaller body also makes this a VERY comfortable couch guitar...and it weighs almost nothing. Slight neck dive, my full size Casino has more. The Pau Ferro board on mine is pretty dark...I honestly thought it was Rosewood when I unboxed it.Sounds fairly decent unplugged when you're on the sofa without an amp.

The Wow Factor
Is this a guitar for beginners? Sure...but get a professional set-up. Hollow-bodies, in my experience, "fight back" a little more than a semi-hollow, or LP/SG/Tele/Strat I've played and that can be off putting to beginners. P-90's hum too, it's just the way it is from the design of the pickup. If this would bother you, the Epi 339 is a great little guitar. A good set-up and this guitar plays as comfortably as any of my guitars that cost 3-4 as much. Quality and build wise, it's the equal to any recent electric I played or owned that cost up to $1K...after a good set-up.

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