
It did not "fall off" as was written, and it is actually very easy to repair.
THUNDERBIRD BASS TEMPLATE CRACKED
I have a Gibson Thunderbird with a cracked headstock from being dropped. I just feel it is a bit too opinionated, and it is conjecture regarding the "weakness" of a Thunderbird. Ok I see that the John Entwistle comment needs citation. The Real Libs- speak politely 16:12, (UTC) Reply All information must be accompanied by a verifiable source that passes Wikipedia's reliable sources policy. contribs) 16:00, (UTC) Reply NOTE: "Personal experiance" on Wikipedia = original research The policy is NO original research.Preceding unsigned comment added by GibsonBird ( talk If I don't see aything changed in a bit, I'll read up and try it myself. New member to Wiki, so I would prefer someone a bit more experienced take the reigns on this. Can we add/edit this into that section as well? This is the Achilles Heel of ALL Gibson guitars, not just Thunderbirds. This is because there is the thinnest area of he entire guitar, and a big angled headstock all cut out of one piece of wood. Coupled with a fast, narrow/thin neck (in comparison to most Fenders)it creates a design that may crak fairly easily at the nut. I will offer up this: Gibson as a company chooses to use an angled headstock.

Can we remove or edit the wording of that section?

In my experience, Thunderbirds are amazingly sturdy. That is the supporting evidence? I could drive a Hummer into a wall at 90 mph and smash it to pieces, but I wouln't claim it to be easily destructible. The quote says that after Keith Moon knocked over John's T Bird, John got enraged and smashed it to pieces.
