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Well if you're ordering a Carvin, that's the only pointy headstock you can get and that's the price. Still better than Jackson charging you $3 grand for a 1-hum Soloist, but it's your choice....
Well if you're ordering a Carvin, that's the only pointy headstock you can get and that's the price. Still better than Jackson charging you $3 grand for a 1-hum Soloist, but it's your choice....
I'm just saying it seems steep is all. I mocked one up at Carvin.com and it went over $1000 but I guess it would be $900 if their $100 special actually adjusted in the specs page. Compare that to what one would have paid in 1989> $499.
One of the few cases you see a similar guitar selling for more now (almost double for the Carvin) than what it retailed for 20+ years ago.
For example most of the Charvel model series were selling for more new back then for what one can get a new Jackson Japanese import today.
Carvin`s prices are going up pretty fast. Not but a couple of years ago they were dirt cheap, but are going up fast as are the options, although their best deal is on the stainless steel frets for under $100, that is a great deal!! Jack.
Yeah I noticed that too. I mocked up a DC125 with the stainless steel jumbo frets and they were only +$40 I'd say thats a good price. Everything else though is pricey, Im not sure when you order a Floyd Rose whether that assumes they make the nut for the neck a FR type or they just rig it with a plastic nut with a FR trem. In any event there is a $25 charge for a FR nut route.
When we are referring to Carvin's prices "going up fast"... how fast and how much are we talking about?
For example, with Jackson, we roughly know that there has been X % price increase over X number of years. Can anyone provide this calculation for Carvin?
I just ordered a custom kit from them, and want to eventually order a custom classical thin line (CL450) from them too... so hopefully they don't keep raising prices too fast...
For $25 you get the Floyd Nut and attatched As for going up, I use to keep my old catalogs, but my best guess is about $200 per guitar in the last couple years. Some of their options are really fairly priced, but others are not. If you order online, they don`t show alot of their options, like the pointy headstock, V headstock and others. Best is to call. Even then, the slaes associates are all different and always don`t know your answers. They really go thru the sales people these days over there. That is a bad sign sometimes. Jack.
I just wanted to add that Carvin is staying away from Kahlers, becasue when Kahler closed up before, Carvin was kinda stuck and they got upset about it. They don`t want to sell a product that might go out of business again. seams weird, but I would consider a DC125C with a Kahler Pro as I don`t really care for recessed floyds and Carvin doesn`t offer non-recessed floyds Jack.
I'm just saying it seems steep is all. I mocked one up at Carvin.com and it went over $1000 but I guess it would be $900 if their $100 special actually adjusted in the specs page. Compare that to what one would have paid in 1989> $499.
One of the few cases you see a similar guitar selling for more now (almost double for the Carvin) than what it retailed for 20+ years ago.
For example most of the Charvel model series were selling for more new back then for what one can get a new Jackson Japanese import today.
You have a point, but then Carvin has a better reputation and a bigger market prescence today than they did 20 years ago. They have raised their prices relatively but are still a good value and, within their more limited custom specs, will get you your custom spec'ed guitar in 6-8 weeks, not a year like Jackson. Of course Warmoth is a whole nother story, but they don't do neck-through AFAIK.
Personally if I were in the market for a pointy Carvin, I WOULD more likely scan Ebay for an 88-89 DC145 or DC125, or DC127 (really a DC125 with neck HB option back then). Those guitars actually go for more now than they did now as often as not because they're rare. But if I wanted a new one, I'd order a DC127 with the Carvin pointy hs and a Floyd with Floyd nut and call it good.
I do wish they offered neck binding though, but no big deal really, it's just cosmetic.
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