We have certain model numbers in the Charvel "toothpaste logo" guitars that have a numbering convention.
The 275, 375, and 475 end in "75".
The 550, 650, and 750 end in "50".
I mean, why not name them the 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, and 700? I can't figure out the significance behind the final two digits.
Semi-related: In my residential neighborhood, there are many short streets where the address numbers are in the thousands. A street that has maybe 30 houses on it might have the following silly addresses:
1501 Anywhere Street
1502 Anywhere Street
etc.
All the way up to 1530 Anywhere Street
Instead of starting at #1501 and ending at #1530, why not just start at #1 and stop at #30? There are clearly not fifteen hundred houses on this tiny street anyway.
Same thing with the Charvels. Why not SIMPLIFY the numbers? Yngwie was wrong; More is NOT more.
The 275, 375, and 475 end in "75".
The 550, 650, and 750 end in "50".
I mean, why not name them the 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, and 700? I can't figure out the significance behind the final two digits.
Semi-related: In my residential neighborhood, there are many short streets where the address numbers are in the thousands. A street that has maybe 30 houses on it might have the following silly addresses:
1501 Anywhere Street
1502 Anywhere Street
etc.
All the way up to 1530 Anywhere Street
Instead of starting at #1501 and ending at #1530, why not just start at #1 and stop at #30? There are clearly not fifteen hundred houses on this tiny street anyway.
Same thing with the Charvels. Why not SIMPLIFY the numbers? Yngwie was wrong; More is NOT more.
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