If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Models
The prudes may snub them, but I don't care.
I dont need furniture.
If its tough, shreds, and screams, Its all good.
If it gets jacked, I'll get another one.
And rock that sucker.
Models
The prudes may snub them, but I don't care.
I dont need furniture.
If its tough, shreds, and screams, Its all good.
If it gets jacked, I'll get another one.
And rock that sucker.
Somewhere in Cleveland my 89 Carvin DC sits. It was one of the superstrat neck thrus with an oil finish. I wish I had never sold that thing. I have yet to see anything, even in the Carvin collectors forums that would rival it.
Models
The prudes may snub them, but I don't care.
I dont need furniture.
If its tough, shreds, and screams, Its all good.
If it gets jacked, I'll get another one.
And rock that sucker.
Look in the cavities. It is not capped, and not pancake or sandwich.
Those bodies back then were either solid quilt, Flame, or birds eye.
Semantics at work, if you call it solid quilt/flame/birds I expect to see that 100%
perhaps I should clarify that the link in your first post doesn't show an 'all over' quilted guitar
unlike (most of the) bookmatched examples you now linked
"There's nothing taking away from the pure masculinity I possess"
Come on now. You cant be serious.
Those V220s took a lot of lumber to make, and are rare to see with figured bodies.
I doubt their figured stock came in sizes large enough to do a complete book match like the DC bodies had.
Hell, the price on that guitar in 84 was $724, and in 86 was $690.
That's about the same price as a new Model 3.
Models
The prudes may snub them, but I don't care.
I dont need furniture.
If its tough, shreds, and screams, Its all good.
If it gets jacked, I'll get another one.
And rock that sucker.
you see this alot in guitars of that era, 10 tops and highly figured wood was the exception not the norm. even if you ordered it that way it was more of an "a" or "aa" grade, not like today with "aaa" and "10" tops. back then it wasnt much of an upcharge for SOLID figured woods, nothing like it now.
Early BC Rich guitars have solid maple wings. I have a BCR Explorer bass like that. Not highly figured. I've seen some that were nicely figured and solid.
I'm getting a custom Moser and talked to some wood vendors. Anything now is possible in terms of wood quality and size but you will pay more now than in the past. It's easier to build a neck thru with solid wings than with a top. Tops were common on bolt ons and set necks because it's easy to build that way. No neck to get in the way.
Those old Carvins were set neck. They didn't start building neck thru until 88.
Models
The prudes may snub them, but I don't care.
I dont need furniture.
If its tough, shreds, and screams, Its all good.
If it gets jacked, I'll get another one.
And rock that sucker.
Comment