How come almost all Stars Rhoads come with 24 frets and on the regular Jackson Line only the JS and RR24 come with 24? Not a single guitar from the USA Select line comes with 24 that I've seen...I've only seen those mentioned before and CS jobs with two octave fretboards...
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My best guess is that imports are all tooled for 24 fret guitars, so there is no variance. Traditional RRs have 22 frets so they are available in traditional config with the USA series, and there is another USA series available to those who don't want a traditional rhoads.'02 Jackson KV2
'92 Jackson Rhoads PCS
'92 Jackson Rhoads Tribute
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Originally posted by 3nz View PostNot a single guitar from the USA Select line comes with 24 that I've seenLast edited by neilli; 04-13-2009, 07:24 PM.Popular is not the same as good
Rare is not the same as valuable
Worth is what someone will pay, not what you want to get
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Probably to adhere to what Rhoads wanted.
However, I have to question the adherence to any "tradition" for its own sake, especially from a company that got its start by and built its entire heritage upon breaking tradition.I want to depart this world the same way I arrived; screaming and covered in someone else's blood
The most human thing we can do is comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
My Blog: http://newcenstein.com
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Originally posted by Evil Homer View PostI dont see what's progressive about 24 frets.
Seriously, the benefits of having a 2-octave neck far outweigh the tonal differences between neck pickup placement.I want to depart this world the same way I arrived; screaming and covered in someone else's blood
The most human thing we can do is comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
My Blog: http://newcenstein.com
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Originally posted by Newc View PostThen I guess you don't see the benefit of electricity, indoor plumbing, and motorized vehicles :ROTF:
Seriously, the benefits of having a 2-octave neck far outweigh the tonal differences between neck pickup placement.
But then, I'm playing caveman music that doesn't really require 23rd or 24th frets (although it's sometimes fun to play "up there").
Actually, I'm completely turned around on the subject now. I can't believe how conservative Jackson has become. Why do they even waste valuable time & energy putting neck pickups in when that same space good be put to better use with more frets? Make all their models 36 fretters. Those "real musicians" amongst us will get all the tonal variation they require out of their tone knobs, coil splitting, coil tapping, phase switching, pickhand positioning, concentric pots, 80s rack gear, etc, right?Hail yesterday
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