There is another possible solution to your truss rod issue.
I got a Ripper on ebay once with the same problem, which I got fixed for £30. The Ripper in question was already a bit hacked, plus rinned and not worth spending big bucks on. You could probably do it yourself to be honest
This is not the best repair but it is the cheapest. 
What you do is scallop out a bit of the wood, until the truss rod is showing again. 
Heres a pic of mine after the repair

Where you can see wood rather than black is where the wood was removed. It all depends how much of the tip has snapped to see if it will work.
Stewmac actually make a tool for this, but a bit expensive if you are just doing one
The downside is that the bottom truss rod cover screwhole is then lost....
You have also to ask why it snapped? Is the neck warped? Was someone overtightening to straighten an un-straightenable neck. Might be better to part it out on ebay and see what you can get!
And by the way,  if you want to date it check the ripper pages on my site gibsonbass.com (there are several pages of info)
, Yours looks like a 75-76.
Early ones had a differnt body shape, more rounded horns
Good luck!
julesStatistics: Posted by evilLordJuju — Fri Jan 12, 2007 2:58 pm
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