I remeber there was some debate here years ago about these early necks with the brass markers possibly being Boogie necks. The early Charvels were other companies parts assembled as Charvels. If Hoss or Kevin (83sandimas) chimed in they would definately know.
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Originally posted by mudkicker View PostI remeber there was some debate here years ago about these early necks with the brass markers possibly being Boogie necks. The early Charvels were other companies parts assembled as Charvels. If Hoss or Kevin (83sandimas) chimed in they would definately know.
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No expert here, but from what I have seen and the specs you list, it is very posible you have an early neck. Convesional wisdom on line says that Charvel Manufacturing did the 21 frets, rosewood dots and brass side markers for sure with the klusons. As to any others, it is possible and keep in mind that Charvel used some Boogie made parts early on so it is possible that the origins are both."I''ll say what I'm gonna say, cuz I'm going to Hell anyway!"
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Originally posted by RR05xx View PostNo expert here, but from what I have seen and the specs you list, it is very posible you have an early neck. Convesional wisdom on line says that Charvel Manufacturing did the 21 frets, rosewood dots and brass side markers for sure with the klusons. As to any others, it is possible and keep in mind that Charvel used some Boogie made parts early on so it is possible that the origins are both.
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Well, I can tell you this, SD charvel neck specs, particularly the early ones, are ALL over the map.
The necks were done by hand and they were all in effect "custom" one ofs. By around 85-86, the specs seem to have settled done (I own a couple of s-heads from that time frame and they are petty consistent. However, I have played a ton of early serialized guitars and while there seems to be some consistency kinda sorta between necks with similar nut widths, if you compare 20 random guitars, they go all over the map in thickness and feel. I also have a couple of '82 s-heads and they could not be more different - one with wide and very thin (1 3/4 nut - almost like a classical, but still very cool to play) and the other is more bat-like (with a 1 11/16 nut - still very charvel-like and comfy to play), but the two are really not anything alike, even though they were made a few months apart. I have played other old charvels with the wide/thin feel that are similar to my 1 3/4 and I have an '85 pointy with the fatter profile very similar to the 1 11/16 one (these fatter ones are definately keepers when you can find them IMHO - very cool marriage between charvel playability and some beef to the neck).
Keep in mind also that Charvel Mfg started out as a guitar repair shop (cira late 60s/early70s) and then, IIRC, gradually starting making "replacement" parts, first contracting necks and bodies from other sources (Boogie Bodies for example) and making small parts like stamped input jacks, then moving on to in-house production of necks and bodies after purchasing pin routers etc. necessay for relatively "mass" production (well enough to try to support a business with anyway). Also, one of the nitchs they were going for at first was fender replacement necks/boides, so it is not surprising that a neck would have fender specs (David Gilmore ordered a couple of charvel necks from Charvel directly in about 1978 - he even asked them to apply a fender logo -there is a scan of the work order floating around the internet and it fits with Gilmore's own telling of the history of his black strat as posted on-line).
Supposedly, (according to EVH) the original EVH B+W guitar from VI cover was assembled by EVH from parts he got from Wayne, NOT even assembled by Wayne Charvel. Part of the problem is the written record of that time frame is sparce. There is an article on line which supposedly has an interview with Wayne Charvel and then a reply by Grover Jackson (who bought Charvel Mfg from Wayne in 1978 and made the company profitable among other things). They both talk about how they sourced/made bodies/necks etc. The truth of what really happened probably lies somewhere in the middle of both "recollections", but I tend to believe Grover as Wayne sold out before 99.9% of the guitars that everyone thinks of as original "Charvel" were made. Kinda makes his current business model a joke in my mind. Sorry for the long post/rant.Last edited by RR05xx; 02-06-2009, 06:30 AM."I''ll say what I'm gonna say, cuz I'm going to Hell anyway!"
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We had asked a former Jackson/ Charvel employee (J. Walker) what era of Fender Strat neck was used as a template for the early Charvel necks. If I remember it was either a 56 or 57 strat neck. So the early necks were very Fender like.
Like above the Charvel necks really didn't become consistent until the pointies came out. Alot of the strat heads feel similar. But, I would say they were consistant until near the end of their run.
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First "Charvel pointy was probably early '83? All of the 82s I have seen are either strat, gibson explorer typem gibson V type (or something totally one of), but not pointy. It is possible that earlier than 83 exists. Remember, the first "pointy" was actually a Jackson RR in '81-82 time frame and Grover put his last name on the hs just in case the idea flopped."I''ll say what I'm gonna say, cuz I'm going to Hell anyway!"
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There was an '82 Explorer bass (#1456) that may have been the 1st Charvel pointy, but one source says it was shaped from a standard P-Bass style headstock, and I don't know whether that means it was done at the factory or not.
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Originally posted by j2379 View Postcheck the heal width & its hard to tell but are the dots closer spacing. EARLY schecter necks have very much those same feature but have the standard fender heal width. whats the truss rod bolt look like?Last edited by tonedeaf; 02-07-2009, 06:23 PM.
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Actually, it worked both ways depending on the timeframe. Before Grover took over, they got parts from Boogie, Schecter, and DiMarzio. Not sure which specific parts came from DiMarzio, but I always thought they were getting their bodies & necks from Boogie or Schecter. Grover's first big deal when he got the pin routers up & running was to make bodies & necks for DiMarzio. That was right when he took over, like in Nov. or Dec. of '78. Depending on who you believe, he may have had the deal in the works for some time before buying Wayne out, and that's one of the sore points between the two.Last edited by dg; 02-09-2009, 10:26 AM.
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Originally posted by dg View PostActually, it worked both ways depending on the timeframe. Before Grover took over, they got parts from Boogie, Schecter, and DiMarzio. Not sure which specific parts came from DiMarzio, but I always thought they were getting their bodies & necks from Boogie or Schecter. Grover's first big deal when he got the pin routers up & running was to make bodies & necks for DiMarzio. That was right when he took over, like in Nov. or Dec. of '78. Depending on who you believe, he may have had the deal in the works for some time before buying Wayne out, and that's one of the sore points between the two.
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