http://www.jcfonline.com/threads/105715-Neck-through-construction/page1 is very, very interesting read. I thought although I am not a pro guitar player for some tens of years experience, but got some really sound knowledge in guitar building/guitar related topics. However, this thread proved me wrong. The thing I hate about guitar making is the fact that the semantics as well as known "facts" can get quite blurry by the time.
For instance, people have known neck thru construction to be superior regarding the sustain of the guitar. But for the last 4-8 years we`ve started to hear the bolt-on method is better. In this forum lots of people "believe" (I too) quartersawn necks are stiffer and less prone to warpage whereas in other forums some "techs" claim there are proven facts for flatsawn necks to carry these claims [http://www.talkbass.com/forum/f57/quartersawn-vs-flatsawn-117872/#13]. Or now, soloists for not being neck thru but set through. Last but not least, gluing a bottom wood to the extension neck makes stronger but is as well cost effective.
So I am sure there is no proven facts for anything we, guitarists discuss. From now on I have a firm believe there actually really isnt but there is only the concept of manipulating the public opinion. Otherwise almost every company would produce similar products offering same features (bolt-on, thru, quartersawn, e.t.c). To support my humble opinion take ESP for example. Have you ever seen any standart esp/ltd offering quartersawn necks to the market although a std, ESP starts from a good 1.5-2k? I am gonna pay 2k but receive an "inferrior" guitar? I dont think ESP could afford producing shoddy products especially considering the heavy competition. Or, Ibanez for populating the market with their "inferior" bolt-ons. And dont get me started on MIK, MIJ or USA stuff. Is ESP stupid to ask almost the same price for their Japanese products compared to hand made usa jacksons?
My MIK Cort x-th has the best neck (5pc maple/bubinga). God I have NEVER needed to adjust the rod for 2 yrs and never stored the guitar in its case!
What do you people say?
For instance, people have known neck thru construction to be superior regarding the sustain of the guitar. But for the last 4-8 years we`ve started to hear the bolt-on method is better. In this forum lots of people "believe" (I too) quartersawn necks are stiffer and less prone to warpage whereas in other forums some "techs" claim there are proven facts for flatsawn necks to carry these claims [http://www.talkbass.com/forum/f57/quartersawn-vs-flatsawn-117872/#13]. Or now, soloists for not being neck thru but set through. Last but not least, gluing a bottom wood to the extension neck makes stronger but is as well cost effective.
So I am sure there is no proven facts for anything we, guitarists discuss. From now on I have a firm believe there actually really isnt but there is only the concept of manipulating the public opinion. Otherwise almost every company would produce similar products offering same features (bolt-on, thru, quartersawn, e.t.c). To support my humble opinion take ESP for example. Have you ever seen any standart esp/ltd offering quartersawn necks to the market although a std, ESP starts from a good 1.5-2k? I am gonna pay 2k but receive an "inferrior" guitar? I dont think ESP could afford producing shoddy products especially considering the heavy competition. Or, Ibanez for populating the market with their "inferior" bolt-ons. And dont get me started on MIK, MIJ or USA stuff. Is ESP stupid to ask almost the same price for their Japanese products compared to hand made usa jacksons?
My MIK Cort x-th has the best neck (5pc maple/bubinga). God I have NEVER needed to adjust the rod for 2 yrs and never stored the guitar in its case!
What do you people say?
Comment