Lunch Plan:
I came down with some sort of stomach bug last night, so the long commute into DC wasn't in the cards this morning. I've taken sick leave for the day, but continue to watch my messages and work on things remotely as they come up. Lunch will be something light - probably a bowl of tomato soup.
I work in the US Department of Agricuture's headquarters complex, so the cafeteria is something of a showcase for ingredients from small, local farms. It's open to the public, so there is a stream of tourists and school groups rolling through for the low (for downtown DC) prices. We're next door to the Smithsonian Institution, so the crowds can get pretty heavy at times. With this being peak season for field trips, I anticipate a lot of students waiting in the lines and taking up the tables for the rest of the week.
Which leads to the G&L Question of the Day: What were George and Leo thinking with the student model (SC and SB series) G&Ls?
Don't get me wrong, I have two of them and love them to death. But in an industry where "student" equals "small and cheap", the SC and SB series went against the conventional wisdom. They were made in the same factory and by the same craftsmen as the grown-up instruments, and used most of the same parts. At the time the student models came out in 1982, they were mainly distinguished from the "professional" instruments by having slab bodies single coil pickups instead of the contours and humbuckers used on the L-series and El Toro basses, F-100, and G-200. The only other single coils in the product line were in the S-500, and the SC-3 shared these. The bodies were maple rather than mahogany or ash, and were very slightly smaller than their "grown up" counterparts. Here are comparisons between an S-500 and an SC-2, both from 1982:


Here are some similar shots with an '81 L-2000 and a very early (possibly the prototype) SB-1:


I can't imagine there would have been a substantial cost savings compared to the professional models, but they needed special cases due to the slightly undersized bodies. Unlike student models from Fender, the G&Ls all had standard scale lengths (25.5" for guitars and 34" for basses), and 22 frets.
I guess I need to figure out a point here besides random old G&L porn

Non-G&L Question of the Day:
What are the spring (or fall for the Southern Hemisphere types) activities in your locality? As I mentioned, tourists are swarming Washington DC right now for class trips to the Smithsonian, and the annual Cherry Blossom Festival started on the National Mall last weekend. In my neighborhood, boats are being prepared for warm weather and we're starting to hear the sounds of kids playing outside until dark.
I hope everybody manages to have a great day!
Ken