Quote from: eighteen-0-nine on December 03, 2011, 10:44:03 PMQuote from: Sifu Ben on December 03, 2011, 10:22:00 PMFor $35 Warmoth do a very nice contoured heel.Yeah I've seen that. Do you know (or anyone in that matter) how much this improves the ability to access the upper frets?It works, because it removes some wood in the right place to reduce the bulk of the heel.But it's not a massive improvement. And you have to be careful to use different-length screws because the heel now varies in thickness! When I buy Warmoth bodies I'm happy with the normal heel.
Quote from: Sifu Ben on December 03, 2011, 10:22:00 PMFor $35 Warmoth do a very nice contoured heel.Yeah I've seen that. Do you know (or anyone in that matter) how much this improves the ability to access the upper frets?
For $35 Warmoth do a very nice contoured heel.
I'd imagine though Philly you're not doing 3 note per string sweeps at the dusty end ;)
Thanks very much for your advice :) I just wondered also - How is the wood quality from Warmoth? As in if you bought a cheap Alder or Basswood guitar, how would the quality/sound compare to Warmoths woods?
Quote from: Sifu Ben on December 03, 2011, 11:01:42 PMI'd imagine though Philly you're not doing 3 note per string sweeps at the dusty end ;)how do you do 3 note per string sweeps? :P
how do you do 3 note per string sweeps? :P
wouldn't that be more called economy picking?:?I dunno, I'd thought of that and figured it'd more be called economy picking. Plus it meant i couldn't make the cheap joke, so i discounted it :lol: