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Muzz

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Posts posted by Muzz

  1. I think the dingus is staying this time. Looking at it, I know I can play comfortably with the sliver on the treble side of the neck pocket, and it'll add an ounce of stability too, so I think it'll just get smoothed out.

    Yep that neck pocket treble side sliver (hey we made a new term) will add a ton of stability especially with that length of the pocket.

  2. You didn't chop off his dingus this time, and it's slightly larger than average :D

    I'm still thinking about cutting off the dingus.

    Yes I can understand how leaving it on could be painfull for you B) Better lop it off :D

    Hope you keep the thin sliver on the body under the neck lower side, that will look cool.

  3. Okay...finally starting to get somewhere.about 3 hours of hand sanding and 1/2 hour of blacking out the pickup routs and this is where it stands.I also refined the carve a bit..it was more radiused towards the neck pickup than it should have been.

    l_9c04aa10671e4664a42a51ff62ffb737.jpg

    Next free time I get I am going to be shaping a belly cut and sculpting the heel and cutaway...I believe I am going to do away with binding altogether.

    What a difference once you got that horrible orange colour off, that grain pattern looks great, so don't stuff up the finish :D Hang in there, it would be fantastic to see this turn into a rock solid metal workhorse.

  4. Yep, I am a die hard valve lover, but I agree there are lots of pros to modelling amps, the first one

    Fun

    My modelling amp cost $240 and it was worth it just to see my friends face when I hit the footswitch and broke out into the harmonized lead from Detroit Rock City all by myself B)

    Lots of other good reasons to have one, if you play gigs long enough with a valve amp at some time you will hear a horrible whining sound and you will look around to see smoke coming out of your amp, you have about 5 seconds of sound left. Unless you have your moddeling amp close by, then you simply plug that into your speaker or the PA and keep going. I wish someone had told that to Steve Stevens before his amp blew as Billy Idol was tearing towards the stage in a hovercraft at a football grand final some years back, biggest Wah, Wah, Waaaah I have ever seen.

    I love my Marshall valve amp so much I am married to it, but I know it's a prehistoric relic made for an age where bands played huge halls with only a vocal PA. 100 watt valve stacks are ridiculously over powered for most uses these days (perhaps that's what I love about it). And I agree with you Guitar2005 that a smaller head like the Blackstar 20 is a great option.

    BlackstarHTStudio20GuitarAmpHead.jpg

    The Vox Tone lab does sound good, you know its a modelling preamp with a single 12AX7 in the preamp stage, exactly as the Marshall JMD has a modelling preamp with a 12AX7 in that stage.

    I agree with Tim also, valve amp versus modelling amp doesn't have to be an either or situiation, you only live once, spoil yourself, get one of each :D:D

  5. I checked out the Marshall modelling amp with valve power stage and one 12Ax7 in the preamp stage, last week, it sounds great, very versatile

    take a look at this vid

    The convenience of not having to lug around a big sports bag filled with cables, effects racks, seperate pre amp etc makes it a tempting option.

    I posted a vid of me playing my practice Behringer 45 watt modeling amp in the electronics section but I'll chuck it up here as well

    Those things are so good for dropping round to your friends house for a practice/jam :D

  6. Tried the guitar out loud through a Marshall in the rehearsal studio, great sound, heaps of sustain, fatter than a single coil, but with a little tinge of strat tone. Nice articulation, individual notes still clear.

    Stuck a microphone in front of my practice modelling amp to shoot this vid so you can hear it.

    default.jpg

  7. I think that it won't work. :D

    this pickup doesn't gives you more sustain, it is just sounds more "powerfull".

    (sorry about my english.)

    No worries, your English is a lot better than mine was about 11 o'clock last Friday night B) I'll post a video soon of the guitar with the new pick up so you can hear what it sounds like

    that would be pretty cool but i cant see why you would need to attach more wires.

    btw i had one in a strat and while it was much hotter than a standard strat bridge pickup and it was quiet i found it a little too sterile for me but i dont play high gain much.

    No I dont get why either, unless someone really shredded the wires that are attached :D

    I always liked the Duncan Hot Rails..very hot and handles gain well,turning a single coil guitar into a metal machine.In that particular guitar it should sound very good for what you like to play I think.

    You are so right, it did transform this guitar into a metal machine, raawwkkkkk baby.

    Burnt my finger on the soldering iron, you think I would have learnt by now the plastic handle is OK, the metal bit is hot, no touchies. Internet is slowed for me till the end of the month, will post pics and vid then. TTFN.

  8. This guitar had a stacked single space in the bridge posi, it sounded good, but not enough bite and sustain for me.

    PA230723.jpg

    The circuit doesn't have many earth wires, even the in jack has only the positive connected, the earth runs through the copper shielding.

    PA230724.jpg

    I thought I would try one of these,

    PA230725.jpg

    I have never seen this arrangement on a pick up before, it looks as if you can attach your own wires to the back of the pup

    PA230726.jpg

  9. I have a Line6 Vetta and I love it. I use a couple of great amp sounds, and all the stomp boxes I could want are built in too.

    I've never used any of the factory presets, I just start with an amp without any effects.

    One of the best purchases I have ever made.

    Yep they are great and so convenient to have everything in one box.

  10. I will bring the vodka.

    Since we are flushing bits I am going to get his shellac while we are at it.

    PS Muzz does your old lady know you posted her picture? B)

    :D Silly, It's not my old lady, it's the lady that lives across the road from you, what can I say, she likes posing with guitars, I like photography. She said she was thinking about asking you, but she liked my guitars better :D

  11. If you are staining, the old high school technique of sawdust mixed with PVA as a surface fill after a scalpel score should do it.

    Would I just be scoring up the surface enough so that the glue sticks nicley or?

    Also do you think the crack will be subtle enough that I can go for a natural or stain?

    Many combinations would do it, you could stain first, perhaps scrape the crack after stain to even the colour if it darkens more than the area around, syringe in the finish and then do the top coats. You would only have to score the crack if you filled it with waterproof glue before staining.

    If I was doing it, I would like the scar on the guitar so I wouldn't care about subtelty, but the fault line is so thin that it shouldn't be very noticable.

  12. just flatten down the curves of the carve a bit

    Please elaborate.

    I think go the way you mentioned and shave a bit off the top and reduce the convexity of the carve, bring it towards the kind of subtle carve you see on an old Iceman like this one

    ibanez-iceman.jpg

    Woops wrong pic I meant to post this one

    iceman%20side1-filtered.jpg

  13. The best way to fill that crack up would be fill it up with glue using an insulin syringe and needle. The scar would be very fine but you could score it with a scalpel and surface fill with something that will take stain (if it is going to be stained). I love neat repair scars on guitars.

    What sort of glue would be best to use with that method?

    1-2m is huge. :D

    Ooops typo "mm" is what i was goin for.....

    I'm not touching the crack, but I think I am going to enjoy watching this project B)

    ,

    %#@$ it. just made a lier out of myself :D wouldn't be the first time

    Because the crack is so thin, you could use just about anything, if it was me I would use a two pack finish, inject it in and use the same finish to coat the guitar, that would really lock that crack in and render it solid, but unless you plan on throwing that bass across the stage to a fumble fiingered friend it shouldn't make much difference, superglue, PVA, model aeroplane glue (which I have used for fretting) would all be fine.

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