Just put a bunch of pics in Member's Treasures--a '72 Epiphone EA 250 I bought new in spring of that year. If I can be of help to anyone with a 250 or it's apparent Aria cousin, the 5102T, or if you're thinkin' of snagging one, plz let me know. Thought about posting a review, but HC pretty much runs the gamut, so just a few highlights maybe...
Fast, clean, low action, ultra comfy neck--very true. Everybody that picks it up raves about the feel.
Gretsch-y sound? Not IMHO, but terrific in its own right. Got a lot of hours on a '67 Chet Atkins Country Gent. The Epi is a touch edgier, with a bit more (tight) low end and enunciation in the pick detail, but drop-dead gorgeous in an amp with enough tonal range to showcase the 250's voice. A hint of BB King, but nowhere near as prevalent as my Epi Sheraton II--so IMHO more versatile than the Sheri, a Dot, or a 335. It'll never be a Strat or an LP, but amped right you can play a very nice riff on that stuff anyway. (However, I prefer to use my Strat and LP by a long shot for solidbody voicings. Let the 250 be itself.)
Durable? Check the pix. Mine got played daily for the first ten years, still regularly even today. It wasn't cased when it was a daily player, just sat out. Also got several miles on the road with it. Never cold or heat-shocked, always covered my belt buckle. The frets are quite worn but still play fast and smooth like every Matsu neck I've ever seen. That said, by now you're almost sure to be looking at pots, jacks, and switches. Not the quietest controls even when new. And watch that heelblock, see below!
Noisy pups. Yes and no. Verrry pretty sound, and quite manageable actually, if you TLC 'em a bit. So stay away from speakers. Set them a bit low and use a clean boost to hit the amp--besides, lower pups pick up more of that nice body tone. Best of all--low stage volume. I use my CyberTwin DI'd to a board anymore, and let the PA do the work. The CT then runs as a low volume monitor, or even silent if we're using IEM. But plugged into a Soldano--look out! BTW, I ran it into a '69 Univox 1221 rig for ten years with zero trouble, but I tend not to let my stages get out of hand anyway.
Wobbly necks. Yup. It's a thin, narrow, clean, lightning fast neck, just like you've heard. That small size has a cost. You gotta stay ahead of the truss rod. Even then, these tend to bend and warp as they age. Nothing a good setup can't overcome, but maybe not as precise an instrument as you might like, so caveat emptor. It has never been a problem I couldn't deal with, but some other ones I've seen were fatal.
Easy to pull 'em out of tune. Also true. It forces you to learn not to pull on the neck when you play. Your other guitars will thank you for this as well. BTW, never saw the need to shim mine, it plays great out of the box. You will tune 'em a bit more often than some other guitars, though, they can be touchy.
Deck cracks between the heel and the neck pup. Yikes! Usually accompanied by loose binding at the heel. It's often due to the heel block coming unglued at the sides--luthier time. Sometimes not, but watch this one.
Hideous Bigsbybomination trem system. I agree, putrid. Almost everybody takes the handle off and the spring out and runs 'em hard-tail. Some came equipped with a lyre-style hardtail anyway. Good feature, that.
Overall, not a bad chameleon for playing covers if you amp it right, and wonderful signature tone exclusive to the 250. Probably run a bit less distortion and more compression than a solidbody--keeps the harmonics in the notes sorted out, I gather. Works great for me. But if you want dead-on LP or Strat, this may not be for you. Takes a little TLC to get the most out of 'em, true enough. I just never minded doing it.
But best of all, they're wonderful players.
As always, YMMV.
--Ray
Oh yeah, would I buy another one? Hm. Maybe for nostalgia. But vintage aside, that Epi Sheraton II is ten times the guitar for the money. IMHO anyway.