Re: Popular myths about Charvel and Jackson guitar
[img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] Oh damn, I thought you were alerting the JCF of a noob attack because you said it right after you quoted me. [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] My sincere apologies... terrible miscommunication and misunderstanding there!
I probably would have understood it better if you had said something to the effect of, "Hmm, could someone please educate this noob (myself) about what Number Of The Priest is talking about? Thanks." Oh well, we've got it cleared up. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]
Yeah, there's an edit time... not sure why but I think it might be so that people don't tamper with their original posts and "change history" so to speak. Who knows?
Neckthrough VS set-neck VS bolt-on are just different construction methods with different feels to them when the guitar is completed. Look at the Jackson USA DK1. If it were any worse than the Jackson USA Soloists, then the DK1 would be MUCH MUCH MUCH cheaper. But, this is not the case. A well-constructed high-quality bolt-on will sustain more than a cheapo $100 neckthrough. Agreed? [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] Also, as long as the neck is securely attached to the body to transfer maximum energy, it doesn't really matter to me which has longer sustain.
If neckthrough were scientifically proven to be better in terms of sustain, NOBODY would be playing bolt-ons any more. Yet, they still endure. In fact, Taylor changed construction of their acoustic guitars from set-neck to bolt-on in 1999 to improve playability, stability, and ease of changing the neck if the need ever arose.
[img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] Oh damn, I thought you were alerting the JCF of a noob attack because you said it right after you quoted me. [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] My sincere apologies... terrible miscommunication and misunderstanding there!
I probably would have understood it better if you had said something to the effect of, "Hmm, could someone please educate this noob (myself) about what Number Of The Priest is talking about? Thanks." Oh well, we've got it cleared up. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]
Yeah, there's an edit time... not sure why but I think it might be so that people don't tamper with their original posts and "change history" so to speak. Who knows?
Neckthrough VS set-neck VS bolt-on are just different construction methods with different feels to them when the guitar is completed. Look at the Jackson USA DK1. If it were any worse than the Jackson USA Soloists, then the DK1 would be MUCH MUCH MUCH cheaper. But, this is not the case. A well-constructed high-quality bolt-on will sustain more than a cheapo $100 neckthrough. Agreed? [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] Also, as long as the neck is securely attached to the body to transfer maximum energy, it doesn't really matter to me which has longer sustain.
If neckthrough were scientifically proven to be better in terms of sustain, NOBODY would be playing bolt-ons any more. Yet, they still endure. In fact, Taylor changed construction of their acoustic guitars from set-neck to bolt-on in 1999 to improve playability, stability, and ease of changing the neck if the need ever arose.
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