Hey all-
I have a Jackson Rhoads RRXMG and need some help if possible please. 3 years ago, I took my 2006 Gibson Les Paul Classic into Long and McQuade (our big music store in Canada) for their annual "free guitar set up day". You buy 2 sets of strings and get a set up for free. Anyways, I wanted the free set up and wanted to pay to get the 7th fret inlay re-glued as it was raising a little bit. They farm the free set ups out to a guy who owns a local guitar repair shop. Anyways, he called me and told me my guitar was un-playable and had black strings and was more or less a pile of shit. I'm a hobby guitar player. I've played live maybe 8 times back around 2006-2009 and never take my guitars anywhere. They get played a few hours a week at home but otherwise sit on their stands in my heated second bedroom. They are never abused and are well taken care of. So anyways, the guy tells me it needed the set up however wanted $50 to do it (it was supposed to be free!) and it needed a new nut for $100 because according to him, the strings vibrated on open chords (which they never did) and the nut sits too low and the frets needed resurfaced for another $150. Then he tells me if I pay for the new nut and set up (so $300), he would do the inlay fix for free. I was really weirded out so I told him no thank you, I'll just take my guitar back. When I went to get it, he tried to lower the price again and told me it would be cheaper if I went through him rather than to take it back to the music store. I told him again, no thank you and took my guitar home. I later spoke to another location of the same music store and they thought it was fishy.
Anyways, today the Long & McQuade location closest to me (same one I took my Les Paul to) had their annual "free guitar set up day" again so I decided to take my Rhoads RRXMG in. I purchased it from the same store back in early 2014. It was built around 2012 I believe and was previously owned by a guitar teacher at the music store. Apparently he was very OCD about taking good care of his guitars. Since then, I've played it on and off for the past few years but usually play my Les Paul or my PRS. Most of the time, it sits on the stand. I've never really wailed on the Floyd Rose or beat the shit out of it by any means. It was a little out of tune and needs new strings (they are a few years old); otherwise it plays beautifully. Anyways, they sent it to the same guy that tried to up-sell me on my Les Paul a few years back. I get a call from him and he tells me he took the strings off to do the free set up and ran into a "massive problem". According to him, my Floyd is "pulling itself out of the guitar" and it needs to be re-glued and secured better. He then pulls this big sales pitch on how if I pay to get it fixed, he'll do a full proper set up, not a quickie one like they do with the free set ups and it'll be $65 to fix the Floyd and he needs to do it before he can do the free set up and he's giving me a screaming deal blah blah blah. More or less, I have to do it or I'm getting my guitar back without strings. I'm a little baffled on how my guitar needs this repair when it's rarely played and has been pampered most of it's life. Has anybody heard of this happening? I have a 2006 Rhoads RR3 that I've owned since new that I used to play for hours every day (used it when I used to play live too years ago) that has the same Floyd Rose and I used to wail the living crap out of it (think Dimebag Darrell dive bombs and etc) and I just looked and it looks absolutely perfect. It has no signs of anything wrong with the Floyd Rose or mounting or anything so I have this feeling he's trying to scam me for some extra cash.
Thanks for any opinions!
I have a Jackson Rhoads RRXMG and need some help if possible please. 3 years ago, I took my 2006 Gibson Les Paul Classic into Long and McQuade (our big music store in Canada) for their annual "free guitar set up day". You buy 2 sets of strings and get a set up for free. Anyways, I wanted the free set up and wanted to pay to get the 7th fret inlay re-glued as it was raising a little bit. They farm the free set ups out to a guy who owns a local guitar repair shop. Anyways, he called me and told me my guitar was un-playable and had black strings and was more or less a pile of shit. I'm a hobby guitar player. I've played live maybe 8 times back around 2006-2009 and never take my guitars anywhere. They get played a few hours a week at home but otherwise sit on their stands in my heated second bedroom. They are never abused and are well taken care of. So anyways, the guy tells me it needed the set up however wanted $50 to do it (it was supposed to be free!) and it needed a new nut for $100 because according to him, the strings vibrated on open chords (which they never did) and the nut sits too low and the frets needed resurfaced for another $150. Then he tells me if I pay for the new nut and set up (so $300), he would do the inlay fix for free. I was really weirded out so I told him no thank you, I'll just take my guitar back. When I went to get it, he tried to lower the price again and told me it would be cheaper if I went through him rather than to take it back to the music store. I told him again, no thank you and took my guitar home. I later spoke to another location of the same music store and they thought it was fishy.
Anyways, today the Long & McQuade location closest to me (same one I took my Les Paul to) had their annual "free guitar set up day" again so I decided to take my Rhoads RRXMG in. I purchased it from the same store back in early 2014. It was built around 2012 I believe and was previously owned by a guitar teacher at the music store. Apparently he was very OCD about taking good care of his guitars. Since then, I've played it on and off for the past few years but usually play my Les Paul or my PRS. Most of the time, it sits on the stand. I've never really wailed on the Floyd Rose or beat the shit out of it by any means. It was a little out of tune and needs new strings (they are a few years old); otherwise it plays beautifully. Anyways, they sent it to the same guy that tried to up-sell me on my Les Paul a few years back. I get a call from him and he tells me he took the strings off to do the free set up and ran into a "massive problem". According to him, my Floyd is "pulling itself out of the guitar" and it needs to be re-glued and secured better. He then pulls this big sales pitch on how if I pay to get it fixed, he'll do a full proper set up, not a quickie one like they do with the free set ups and it'll be $65 to fix the Floyd and he needs to do it before he can do the free set up and he's giving me a screaming deal blah blah blah. More or less, I have to do it or I'm getting my guitar back without strings. I'm a little baffled on how my guitar needs this repair when it's rarely played and has been pampered most of it's life. Has anybody heard of this happening? I have a 2006 Rhoads RR3 that I've owned since new that I used to play for hours every day (used it when I used to play live too years ago) that has the same Floyd Rose and I used to wail the living crap out of it (think Dimebag Darrell dive bombs and etc) and I just looked and it looks absolutely perfect. It has no signs of anything wrong with the Floyd Rose or mounting or anything so I have this feeling he's trying to scam me for some extra cash.
Thanks for any opinions!
Comment