First time in probably 20 years I have had something published that wasn't about cars.
http://guitarkadia.com/emon/guest-post/birth-of-a-prs-guitar/
First time in probably 20 years I have had something published that wasn't about cars.
http://guitarkadia.com/emon/guest-post/birth-of-a-prs-guitar/
Very cool article. Although I read it all in the voice of the "how it's made guy". The small segments along with big pictures make it easier for me to read.
Very cool and interesting. Much props. waits for fist bump
This is only semi-related, but I'm really wanting to try building an acoustic....bending the sides and everything.
Somewhere I have a Gretsch factory tour. Very similar, while very different. Building big hollow bodies is a different kettle of fish.
JoeyM, a guy on my site built a homemade wood-bending thing with some pipe. Works well, too: http://gretschpages.com/forum/other-guitars/bending-wood/68076/page1/
Nice article. Occasionally I miss the PRS I once had (an early bolt-on CE model). For some reason, that guitar had a 'dead' G-note. A fretted G played on any string had essentially no sustain. Wierd. I never really warmed to the 25" scale either (Carvins bug me as well), although I can switch from a Les Paul to a Strat easily...
But damn PRS makes a pretty guitar...
<== likes to make things
Tim Baxter wrote: JoeyM, a guy on my site built a homemade wood-bending thing with some pipe. Works well, too: http://gretschpages.com/forum/other-guitars/bending-wood/68076/page1/
Wow, that looks great!
I smell another project coming on.
Found the Gretsch factory tour video. Lot more handwork going on: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUB6QICAS5I
Somewhere I have a Martin factory tour, too.
A friend of mine has gotten into building guitars out of his garage. Eric Rose guitars. I am thinking about buying one from him.
http://www.thegearpage.net/board/archive/index.php/t-1286635.html
PRS builds acoustic guitars in the same building--upstairs, next to the amp department. I have shot a few photos up there, but not enough to chronicle the entire process. Maybe I'll do that area next.
My instructor wants me to build my own guitar. I think I'm starting to zero in on what exactly I'd build.
David S. Wallens wrote: My instructor wants me to build my own guitar. I think I'm starting to zero in on what exactly I'd build.
Really? My instructors were always complaining I changed guitars too often. I was getting a different one every month (or seemed like it) there for awhile...
Right now, I'm dreaming of a Santos (find them on FB) Telecaster with Duncan P-Rails pick ups with Tele Custom (re: Les Paul) style controls. But I have to rebuild one of the Les Pauls and the ESP first.
Try the G&L ASAT. I've owned a Squier Tele, played on a Fender Tele fairly regularly, but I like my hollow body G&L much better than the "originals".
Oddly enough, what I "want" is a Strat with Les Paul controls and while the switch will technically fit in the LP location on a Strat body, it just doesn't look right. So the plan is a Tele that has the bevels of a Strat. If it works, it'll look like a Tele, but feel like a Strat, if that makes any sense...
Although upon further reflection and research, Ernie Ball places the switch there on the John Petrucci models and it doesn't look bad... so maybe I'll change my mind... would be a lot easier to put a switch there on a Strat than to bevel the hell out of Tele...
BoxheadTim wrote: Try the G&L ASAT. I've owned a Squier Tele, played on a Fender Tele fairly regularly, but I like my hollow body G&L much better than the "originals".
G&Ls are intriguing. (For what it's worth, my Jazz bass lives in a G&L bag.) This weekend we're going to the big guitar show in Orlando--you know, just to look around.
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