NVGD: 1964 Fender Mustang - CAUTION POO BROWN CONTENT AHEAD
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- hotrodperlmutter
- crescent fresh
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69RI are thinner in all ways then the 65RI. I think. For sure the fullness of the back of the neck. The fretboard may be the same width.Grant wrote:A-width necks are 1 1/2 in. at the nut. Japanese mustangs are more like 1 9/16 in., maybe a hair less than 40 mm.
theshadowofseattle wrote: Maybe it's not the shemale porn in your post that matters. Maybe it's the shemale porn in your heart.
Ah, right. I should say that I'm measuring my 90's CIJ Mustang's nut. 90's Mustangs' nuts are as narrow as 69RIs', I think? Certainly not wider.
Last edited by Grant on Wed Apr 06, 2011 4:00 am, edited 2 times in total.
Thanks friendo, I always mix the terms up.Mages wrote:the fullness of the back of the neck is the neck profile. not width.
From my experience, my 90s MIJ Mustang has a thinner profile than 65RI and 69RI but by not as much. Not sure about the width.
theshadowofseattle wrote: Maybe it's not the shemale porn in your post that matters. Maybe it's the shemale porn in your heart.
yes, I believe so.
this all has to do with the vintage guitars. I'm pretty sure the new guitars are just standardized to something close to B width. although I think it varies slightly depending on who is building the guitar.Phil O'Keefe wrote:You will see A and B on 24" scale necks most often, but there are A, B, C and D neck widths. B is by far the most common, although A is not all that rare - especially on "3/4" (22.5") scale necks. A = 1 ½", B = 1 5/8", C = 1 ¾" and D = 1 7/8". You'll also hear people using letters to describe the neck profile - usually with the letters C, D, V and U... but that has to do with the shape (or profile) of the back of the neck and not the actual width of it.
Fact: because of tiny hands I researched small necks and discovered A-Width and by proxy Shortscales and shortscale.org (after a brief dalliance with Offset)
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- mtotallywired
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Glad to see so much interest in this thread! Hope everyone got to see the updated pics on page two.
I do dig this guitar so very much, and have been bringing it to every band practice we've played.
Unfortunately, I keep knocking one of the strings out of the nut. I think its the G or the D.
Because of the A neck, I feel especially heavy handed with it on open chords, which is a bummer but not so bad
cause I don't play too many songs with open chords. The occasional C or E though is enough to make it happen, which makes me
think of adding an extra string tree? but then again I don't want to mess with the headstock. I'm just keeping my eyes peeled
to trade this neck for a B width one, cause I really want to keep this guitar! Another alternative is to just keep this neck (for resale value) and get the jag neck from allparts and possibly get it finished by a pal of mine...but I wonder if that will fit in this neck pocket? I assume it would, because I've seen people pop these vintage A neck's on Japanese RI bodies...
To answer Mage's question,
I got all the issues, intonation, tuning, and vibrato functionality completely sorted thanks to mad-mike's guide over at the Jag-stang forum.
This thing is ridiculously stable now and the vibrato is every bit as usable as the trems on my jazzy's and my avri jag, except tbh, I do like the jazzy/jag design much more.
I do dig this guitar so very much, and have been bringing it to every band practice we've played.
Unfortunately, I keep knocking one of the strings out of the nut. I think its the G or the D.
Because of the A neck, I feel especially heavy handed with it on open chords, which is a bummer but not so bad
cause I don't play too many songs with open chords. The occasional C or E though is enough to make it happen, which makes me
think of adding an extra string tree? but then again I don't want to mess with the headstock. I'm just keeping my eyes peeled
to trade this neck for a B width one, cause I really want to keep this guitar! Another alternative is to just keep this neck (for resale value) and get the jag neck from allparts and possibly get it finished by a pal of mine...but I wonder if that will fit in this neck pocket? I assume it would, because I've seen people pop these vintage A neck's on Japanese RI bodies...
To answer Mage's question,
I got all the issues, intonation, tuning, and vibrato functionality completely sorted thanks to mad-mike's guide over at the Jag-stang forum.
This thing is ridiculously stable now and the vibrato is every bit as usable as the trems on my jazzy's and my avri jag, except tbh, I do like the jazzy/jag design much more.
- Phil O'Keefe
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I have a 8 AUG 65 B stamped vintage neck; it's a slab board with a B width, but definitely a U profile; I only tried it very briefly, and didn't care for the extra "meat" on the shoulders of the neck. I have really short fingers...Mages wrote:yeah, people don't talk about the width that much as I think it has pretty much been standardized to B width these days. but in the 60s fender apparently made everything from A to D width.
I have a '75 Musicmaster neck, and a '94 MIJ, and they are nearly identical in size - both are B widths (1 5/8") but much more of a slim C shaped profile. My '71 Mustang is also very similar in shape (profile), but a tiny bit larger in all respects in terms of the back - a little thicker overall, but it doesn't have as much meat in the shoulders and it is not as quite as thick as the '65 is though. The width is also a B.
I've seen a couple of MIJ Mustang necks that were A widths, and a few USA necks that were A's and even a C width once... but never a D. Not on a Mustang / Duo Sonic or Music Master. I'm not saying they never made one - only that I've never run across one. The vast majority of the necks I've seen (USA and MIJ) are B width, and a few were A's.
- mtotallywired
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A lil twist of fate to close this thread, I ended up selling this to a very happy Japanese gentleman who decided he'd get back to his roots and start playing guitar again, after winning a rolling rock endorsed fender telecaster. you know, those really terrible ones with the logo stamped across the entire body? Dude was 5 foot even, and had tiny hands, and he grabbed a hold of this thing and it was like a match made in heaven!
What did I do with the money instantaneously after? I bought a Japanese 65 RI, in one of my favorite colors, olympic white! I fucking LOVE IT. Now I just need to find a mint pickguard that'll fit this thing!
What did I do with the money instantaneously after? I bought a Japanese 65 RI, in one of my favorite colors, olympic white! I fucking LOVE IT. Now I just need to find a mint pickguard that'll fit this thing!
"if it has more than three chords, its jazz." lou reed