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Roadhouse Blues

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About Roadhouse Blues

  • Birthday 09/25/1989

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  • Location
    New Jersey, United States
  • Interests
    Blues, Classic Rock, Ska, Big Band, Swing, Jazz<br /><br /><br /><br />

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  1. OK, so it's OK if it only goes through the first pickup? I thought PRS's usually had long necks spanning to the bridge pickup, but I'm not sure.
  2. Hello, I'm currently building a PRS McCarty style guitar. I was building a neck, without much of a direction, but I shaved a little bit too much off, and it became too thin to use. Now, I'm going to buy a new neck blank. 1. If I've already glued the two body pieces together, would the guitar be OK if I glued in the neck in by cutting the pickup cavity deeper to the bottom of the first pickup? What I'm asking is would I have enough surface area on the neck to glue it in? The boxed in area on the picture is what the are that the neck would go into if glued (or screwed) 2. If I just screwed my neck in, how would my tone change? With the area shown, would it be better to use glue, or screw taking tonal change and difficulty into account? Thanks a lot! -Matt
  3. Thanks everyone for commenting. I think I agree with Setch. It's my first project, and I know a place that I can get quartersawn mahogany relatively cheaply around my area. I think that I may just start over. With a first project, I'd rather pay that little extra, take that little bit longer for perfection. For the next time, tell me if this sounds good: Plane the neckstock to 3/4", plane headstock to 1/2" with the 1/8" veneer on top (mahogany neck, rosewood f-board, rosewood veneer). Thanks guys. Also, I think it'd be good to have the extra reject-neck in order to practice my shaping etc. thanks, Matt
  4. Hello. I've just about finished the body of my guitar, and I just glued the headstock onto my neck. The joint is great, but I posted earlier about having glued a piece of wood on by accident. I went a little sanding-crazy, and I was wondering if my neck and headstock are too thin to use. The long neck stock is about 5/8" the whole way, and I will be using a hot rod, and then put a rosewood fingerboard ontop. The neck is mahogany. The headstock is 1/4" now after this crazy sanding, and it will have 1/8" of a veneer on it. Do you think: 1. The string tension will be too much and break the headstock? 2. The neck is too thin to install the trussrod and carve into shape? Thanks, Matt
  5. Thanks. I was gone for the weekend and glad to see suggestions. I will be back in the shop tomorrow and will try sawing or routing.
  6. 1-b 2-b 3-a 4-b 5- Agreed- pricing vs. quality. Many instruments made in the US are priced more than others made in asian countries. However, some companies have factories in Asia and America, but they decide to cheap out on the wood sent to Asia, and just put nicer wood into American guitars, making you pay for wood, and origin. Gretsch makes many of its guitars in Japan, and they're excellently crafted, made of nice wood, though expensive. I believe many grestches are worth their prices, but many companies that outsource building to Asia cheap out on materials, such as certain squires, which are made of plywood!!!
  7. Thanks. I figure, though it'll be a huge pain in the ass, I'll probably use heat if I can't chisel it after the weekend. I'm just hoping I won't mess up the joint directly below it that I had intended to make. Thanks again, Matt
  8. It was some titebond glue. I'll try some more chiseling, but I don't have a heatgun. If worst comes to worst, I'm going into the shop monday and I can route/sand it off with a little bit of time.
  9. I have a problem: I just glued the headstock piece onto the larger piece for my neck. I used two blocks of wood between the clamps and the neck in order to prevent denting/damage. One block came off easily, but the other is stuck on. Can anyone tell me how to get it off easily? I'm thinking about chiseling on a part that I won't use. I will also be putting a veneer on top of the headstock, but I need this block removed! Here are pictures of the neck with the block. I guess I could also sand it off.. but that would take awhile. Any help is appreciated!! Thanks, Matt
  10. Does anyone know what types of paint look like those used on the Brian Setzer Hot Rod Models? I just bought a Hot Rod in purple, and I'm thinking about repainting it. I got it very cheaply because it was purple, and I'm thinking about repainting sometime in the next year or so. If anyone knows of the exact paint, or similar paints that give the same hot rod look, please tell me. I'm thinking about blue or red... If you haven't seen one of these guitars, the paint is solid, but it has a very slight sparkle. It's just like on old hot rods that people have painted... or other cars, if you look closely it sparkles, but it looks solid from far away. http://gretschguitars.com/gear/index.php?p...=&cat2=&q=&st=1 that's a link to the exact Gretsch link. Thanks, Matt
  11. Any takers at $175??? Again, email matt32123@comcast.net I can give any pics needed
  12. I'm not sure just yet whether or not I will, but would someone like to purchase my Samson Series One Wireless guitar system??? I realized how I won't be needing it anymore due to my cutback in instrument supplies. Here's a little detail: Samson Series One Guitar Bug Like New! Samson Airline UHF Wireless System. Includes UR1 receiver and AF1 Instrument transmitter.Includes Fender style Transmitter Reciever AC power supply and Manual.Unit Operates on Channel U5. The revolutionary AirLine "plug-in" guitar transmitters come in two versions: the AF1 for Strat®-style inputs and the AG1 for traditional Gibson®-style end-mount inputs and all others. Less than half the size of conventional body packs, these miniaturized transmitters run on a tiny triple-A battery with 14-hour battery life. Both feature an array of on-board controls: A Power On/Off and Mute switch, red/green LED for Power On/Off, a Peak LED and an Input Level control for different pickups. And UHF (Ultra High Frequency) means clearer frequencies with less interference.Designed for use with your compact effect pedals, the UR1 true diversity receiver gives you reception you can always depend on. It features a 1/4" and Balanced output jacks, Power switch, Peak LED and a Volume control. For more info go to. http://www.samsontech.com/products/product...D=1#servsupport I also have 3 pics. I'll email them if you'd like. It's like new... no way to tell it has ever been used, nothing wrong wtih any part of it. It also comes with the original pamphlet, one wireless guitar "plug in", original transmitter, original power supply. If I can't get anyone on here, I'll jsut test my luck on eBay. I'm thinking $199. It's worth $330 new, so I think this is more than fair. The plug in is strat style. It will work with any guitar, it is just made to fit like a strat. The range is over 300 feet. Please tell me if you'd be interested. I could ship next week. Rather than messaging me: EMAIL ME AT matt32123@comcast.net! IT'S MORE CONVENIENT email me for questions or offers. I could even ship friday if someone makes me an offer. -Matt
  13. I'm most likely buying a Gretsch Clipper (1966) very soon, and I was wondering if I would be able to put a Bigsby tremolo tailpiece on it? Mine is just like the one in the picture I'm about to show, but it has 2 pickups and 4 knobs. It does the same bridge and tailpiece however. Gretsch Clipper Image Could anyone please help me out, and tell me what they think about this??? No hotlinking to images not hosted and/or owned by you. I have ammended your image to a link. As noted, please don't start multiple discussions on the same topic - your other thread has been deleted. Cheers for your cooperation
  14. THANK GOD I CAN NOW LIVE AGAIN I'm glad they passed this... that was a crappy suit... PRS just does it better
  15. Thanks. That's all I needed. I understand the building, I just wanted a quick approximate answer. I'm in the middle of a guitar project, and I just wanted to ask this quick newbie kinda question, because I got this free body for a future project. Thanks -Matt
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