Right, I was including that 3rd piece as "part of the neck". 2 wings plus 2 neck pieces, but not a one-piece body like a bolt on or set-neck. I'm less inclined to call it "set" anything anymore because at least so far I've seen nothing that would show that they first build a body with 2 wings and a long neck pocket and then on top they set the actual neck in. Rather they are gluing 4 pieces together, the method of construction is like a neck-through.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
is this a fatal injury or is it just cosmetic (opinions)
Collapse
X
-
As someone said above, with the neck being only half the thickness of the body, it is not a "true thru" once they route it. Once they make that cut, the 'thru' part has been cut off and is really just a waste. But if the neck was the entire thickness, it would still go from end to end --- unless you get a floyd rose tremolo.
If you have a neck pickup, the neck-thru portion is 0.5" longer then a Gibson set neck. If you have only a bridge pickup 4". Or, a Floyd route at 7".
>>all measurements are approximate.
Comment
-
Originally posted by pianoguyy View PostAs someone said above, with the neck being only half the thickness of the body, it is not a "true thru" once they route it.The 2nd Amendment: America's Original Homeland Defense.
Comment
-
But that's the thing, there's not routing, no cutting of a groove for the neck, but three distinct pieces + the neck glued together. And the neck goes thru the length of the body. I imagine by neck-thru it was always meant going through the length of the body, regardless whether it goes through the thickness or not. Well, at least some imports appear to be neck through and through.
What's a laminate neck?
Comment
-
Originally posted by xenophobe View PostUnless you order a CS guitar and spec it with a laminate neck, then it will truly be neck thru. Like my strathead.
20160214_194912[1].jpg
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Catharpin View PostSo this isn't a true neck thru? Is that because of the scarf joint? The center is one piece of mahogany all the way to the strap button. The pickup routes do not bisect the single piece of mahogany that continues to the top of the neck.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]8646[/ATTACH]
Comment
-
Originally posted by wrldeatr7 View Postthere's not routing, no cutting of a groove for the neck
Comment
-
I guess that would be the case if gluing the second piece had no benefit, not that we can determine benefits when it comes to woods and guitars. I wonder though what wood they use for that second piece, the neck wood, the body wood, something else...
Comment
-
Originally posted by pianoguyy View PostWhen I say that the neck-thru ends at the first route, I am not taking about about a neck groove. I am talking about routing out for a pickup. A pickup route is wider than a neck and goes into the side pieces, and it will go deeper than the top piece of wood and into the bottom piece, therefore any "thru" benefit has ended.
Comment
Comment