Re: My GMW experience,
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I guess I'm also in the minority here. If I had a guy contact me about a guitar I had built for him months ago and never heard about any problems, I wouldn't be all open arms about changing all kinds of things either. No offense but you should have called Lee first before taking it anywhere. I imagine it was at one of those places overnight for the fret work right? How do you know they didn't open the board up when they pulled frets or doing anything else to it for that matter? How is Lee supposed to know what they did to it?
I remember when you posted initially about getting the axe back in August. It looked great to me. And I don't recall you mentioning any problems with it. Every custom Jackson I have has shark fin inlays that aren't perfect. There's fill around all of them. The sizes aren't quite perfect going down the board also. I'd imagine its a hell of a lot harder to get ebony against maple to be perfect as well. And maybe I'm wrong but I recall hearing about plenty of bolt on axes that use shims to get the neck angle correct. To me it seems sufficient to fix the frets, the inlays and recess the Floyd, and do a complete refinish because of it, so you don't have to live in torment knowing the neck is shimmed.
And if you think your going to get perfection from Jackson you can think again. I have a laundry list of imperfections on my Warrior. But it is all nit picking stuff. If there was a huge problem that affected play or a huge defect it would have went right back immediately.
If the frets were bad you should have just sent the neck back to Lee. That would have been less shipping cost. As far as Lee being gruff all I can say is that its obvious he's not a people person. I'm the same way so I can understand it. He's always addressed my concerns even though he may have been short with his responses at times. And he has always emailed me back quickly.
He's been tunring work away because he is balls to the wall deep in orders. And because he won't do certain headstock designs as well a few other things. I know stuff like ding repair and partial refinishes don't happen anymore because they are time consuming. It's a total strip and refin or nothing. And what happened to the JCF rule about bashing someone that isn't here to defend themselves?
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It's easy for you to say, that I should have contactd Lee right away, but being half a world a way makes a big difference with this sort of thing. Was I in Utah, I would have packed it back up the same day I found out it needed a fret level. For a new guitar of that caliber to need a fret level is rediculous, but I had to deal with it.
So far I have heard NOTHING from Lee accusing anybody of butchering the board, he met the guys himself, he didn't ask them anything about it. It was at their shop over the weekend, from Saturday morning till Monday afternoon. They took their time and were meticulous in trying to fix the frets.
In case you hadn't noticed, Lee is NOT fixing the frets, nor the inlays. He's only recessing the Floyd and hopefully giving me the correct case, and the whole guitar is not being refinished due to the recess, but I trust he can make it look great, it's GMW after all right?
I know you don't get perfection from Jackson, but filler notwithstanding, their sharkfins are full, and the edges of them are straight. This has been brewing for a while, I asked a while ago to see peoples guitars with ebony sharkfins, so I could compare.
Guitar companies do make mistakes, I've seen some bad things from Gibson guitars just here locally. The difference is in what they do about them. Tell the customer, no, that ok, or take the guitar back and make it right?
I didn't mention any problems with it when I got it as I'm not the kind of person who bags out something without trying to get it rectified. Nobody needed to hear about how my GMW played like crap when I got it. The paintjob did look nice though. I gave Lee every chance to make this right before I told you guys. Had he been as worried as me about the issues you would never have known about it.
[ QUOTE ]
I guess I'm also in the minority here. If I had a guy contact me about a guitar I had built for him months ago and never heard about any problems, I wouldn't be all open arms about changing all kinds of things either. No offense but you should have called Lee first before taking it anywhere. I imagine it was at one of those places overnight for the fret work right? How do you know they didn't open the board up when they pulled frets or doing anything else to it for that matter? How is Lee supposed to know what they did to it?
I remember when you posted initially about getting the axe back in August. It looked great to me. And I don't recall you mentioning any problems with it. Every custom Jackson I have has shark fin inlays that aren't perfect. There's fill around all of them. The sizes aren't quite perfect going down the board also. I'd imagine its a hell of a lot harder to get ebony against maple to be perfect as well. And maybe I'm wrong but I recall hearing about plenty of bolt on axes that use shims to get the neck angle correct. To me it seems sufficient to fix the frets, the inlays and recess the Floyd, and do a complete refinish because of it, so you don't have to live in torment knowing the neck is shimmed.
And if you think your going to get perfection from Jackson you can think again. I have a laundry list of imperfections on my Warrior. But it is all nit picking stuff. If there was a huge problem that affected play or a huge defect it would have went right back immediately.
If the frets were bad you should have just sent the neck back to Lee. That would have been less shipping cost. As far as Lee being gruff all I can say is that its obvious he's not a people person. I'm the same way so I can understand it. He's always addressed my concerns even though he may have been short with his responses at times. And he has always emailed me back quickly.
He's been tunring work away because he is balls to the wall deep in orders. And because he won't do certain headstock designs as well a few other things. I know stuff like ding repair and partial refinishes don't happen anymore because they are time consuming. It's a total strip and refin or nothing. And what happened to the JCF rule about bashing someone that isn't here to defend themselves?
[/ QUOTE ]
It's easy for you to say, that I should have contactd Lee right away, but being half a world a way makes a big difference with this sort of thing. Was I in Utah, I would have packed it back up the same day I found out it needed a fret level. For a new guitar of that caliber to need a fret level is rediculous, but I had to deal with it.
So far I have heard NOTHING from Lee accusing anybody of butchering the board, he met the guys himself, he didn't ask them anything about it. It was at their shop over the weekend, from Saturday morning till Monday afternoon. They took their time and were meticulous in trying to fix the frets.
In case you hadn't noticed, Lee is NOT fixing the frets, nor the inlays. He's only recessing the Floyd and hopefully giving me the correct case, and the whole guitar is not being refinished due to the recess, but I trust he can make it look great, it's GMW after all right?
I know you don't get perfection from Jackson, but filler notwithstanding, their sharkfins are full, and the edges of them are straight. This has been brewing for a while, I asked a while ago to see peoples guitars with ebony sharkfins, so I could compare.
Guitar companies do make mistakes, I've seen some bad things from Gibson guitars just here locally. The difference is in what they do about them. Tell the customer, no, that ok, or take the guitar back and make it right?
I didn't mention any problems with it when I got it as I'm not the kind of person who bags out something without trying to get it rectified. Nobody needed to hear about how my GMW played like crap when I got it. The paintjob did look nice though. I gave Lee every chance to make this right before I told you guys. Had he been as worried as me about the issues you would never have known about it.
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