Get approval before 3pm and we'll send your order out the same working day (stock permitting) for next working day delivery! Who can apply for finance? Then, your order will come through to Andertons and we'll send you the goods. Assuming your application is accepted you'll be able to place your deposit and confirm your order right there. This is where your finance application is processed. You can then choose which finance term you'd like to apply for, and change your deposit if you wish.Īt the end of the checkout you'll be taken to the V12 Finance web site. Go through the checkout process and tick the "Finance" option under "Select Your Payment Method". It's simple! Just add the products you want to your basket and click the "Checkout" button in your basket. Controls: Fishman Sonitone Soundhole mounted Volume and Tone.Strap Buttons: 2 - bottom and side of heel.Pickguard: J-200 Style Tortoise Shell with 2 Color Graphics.Tuning Machines: Epiphone Deluxe with Keystone buttons and press in bushings.Inlays: Mother of Pearl Graduated Crowns.Material: Two-piece maple / mahogany center strip.Back: Solid Figured Maple with center strip.Need some extra oomph? Plug the J-200 into a PA system (and sound great) thanks to a Fishman Sonicore pickup and Sonitone volume and tone controls. Hardware features gold Epiphone machine heads, an ever-reliable bone nut and saddle combo, and sleek ivory colour pins. On top is an Indian laurel fretboard containing contemporary 20 medium jumbo frets and real mother of pearls crown inlays. The back and sides are made of a bright maple and a spruce top, ensuring sparkling highs even with the massive sound projection on offer.Īttached is a very classy two-piece maple and centre piece mahogany neck in the classic and universally trusted rounded “C” shape. It currently retails for $899 and comes in two colors - Aged Vintage Sunburst and Aged Natural Antique.Every aspect of the J-200's build adds to its huge sound and effortless rhythm playing. As of 2020, Epiphone released a new "Inspired by Gibson" model of the J-200, which brings the character and specifications of the Gibson model to a wider market. Gibson's brand, Epiphone, produces a more affordable version of the J-200. Gibson also does limited run models, such as the J-200 Koa, the J-200 Trophy, and Montana Gold. The SJ-200 Custom is a high-end model, featuring rosewood back and sides (like the original SJ-200s from the 1930s), a rosewood fingerboard and bridge, gold hardware, Grover Imperial tuners, LR Baggs electronics, an upgraded case, the same three-piece neck as the Standard and Studio, abalone inlays, an engraved pickguard, an older, script-style Gibson logo, and a 'four ribbon bridge' instead of the Standard's 'two ribbon' bridge.Īlong with these three are two reissues, the True Vintage (based on the 1950s construction) and the Western Classic Prewar 200, which is similar in specifications to the original early models (rosewood back and sides, ebony fingerboard, block inlays). It also has a rosewood fingerboard and bridge, an engraved pickguard, and mother-of-pearl crown inlays. The SJ-200 Standard is available in sunburst and natural, featuring LR Baggs electronics, gold hardware, Grover tuners, figured maple back and sides and a three-piece laminate neck (maple/rosewood/maple). The SJ-200 Studio is the lowest model in the line, featuring walnut rather than maple back and sides, chrome hardware, a plain pickguard, natural finish and no fingerboard binding, but it retains the inlays and electronics of the SJ-200 Standard. Gibson currently makes many variations of the J-200. Early models made from rosewood are highly prized by collectors. Due to the weak post-depression economy and wartime austerity, demand for this high-end guitar was very limited and production quantities were small. Gibson changed the name to the J-200 in 1955. In 1947 the materials used for the guitar changed to maple back and sides. The SJ-200 was named for its super-large 16 7/8" flat top body, with a double-braced red spruce top, rosewood back and sides, and sunburst finish. It was made at the Gibson Factory in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Gibson entered into production of this model in 1937 as its top-of-the-line flat top guitar, initially called the Super Jumbo, changing the name in 1939 to the Super Jumbo 200.