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Originally posted by jsullysix: yep...looks pretty flamey to me. i hope that a truss rod wrench comes with that guitar because it's gonna need some regular maintenance.
sully
<font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">If it's a solid neck you're probably right but if it's just a flamed fretboard it shouldn't be too bad should it?
My goal in life is to be the kind of asshole my wife thinks I am.
that's what i thought until i got a pc3 neck from kevin... the neck itself is regular ol' maple, but the fretboard is quilty. of the 3 he had, 2 had humps and rises, and i had to do a fret level and tweak the bejeezus out of the neck.
figured woods on necks, while pretty, aren't practical. they tend to require a lot more maintenance.
I don't know about the flame maple or quilty necks, but both of the birdseye/birdseye necks I have (warmoth strat neck and a Wolfgang standard) haven't had any more adjustment issues than my other guitars. I adjusted the rod in the warmoth when I first got it and installed it... 9 months or so later, it hasn't moved a bit.
i'm not sayin that every figured neck is a complete and utter pita, but they are more prone to move than non figured wood. i've got an old moser neck that's birdseye and is pretty stable. that said, kevin had a 25th anniv that has a neck that moves like uhaul.
Figured Maple is beautiful on tops and such but way more often than not it's softer than rock Maple. It just takes a little more care is all. If it comes with Graphite or Carbon Fiber reinforcements then don't sweat it.
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