Please help me find a guitar...
Posted: Mon Oct 26, 2015 12:01 pm
I'm looking for a 24-inch scale, set-neck, angled headstock, solid-body electric. Anybody know of one?
Insert innuendo here -Addam wrote:I doubt you'd feel the 1/2" difference.
I can't believe the neck width is 47mm on the Brian Mays while most guitars are 42-43mm!timhulio wrote:24" scale is a pretty tall order, luckily...
From what I've read on the internet (Gibson forums) vintage-spec Gibsons were advertised as 24.75" but measure up as 24.5" and modern Epiphones measure up at 24.75". I haven't measured any Gibsons or Epiphones myself, so I might be regurgitating bullshit.George wrote:Gibsons are .75" longer. Personally I definitely notice the difference between 24" and 24.75", but you're going to struggle finding something with the specs you're after anyway.
Found that on thormann.deNoirie. wrote:Harley Benton do a Red Special copy for cheaps.
Addam wrote:Yes, absolutely. When you play hours a day, small differences like that are huge. It's like having a piece of a popcorn kernel stuck in your teeth. It's a small piece of popcorn, but in the universe of your mouth it feels pretty damn big.George wrote:Either way, 24" vs 24.75", the difference in distance between from nut to 1st fret would be 0.042" or a gnats knacker over 1mm.
Are you going to notice that difference while playing? I don't.
Nah. A 10" difference barely registers for me anymore, switching between my Jaguar, Strat, Tele, VI and Jazz Bass all the time. You notice it at first, but your brain and fingers adapt.mountain2012 wrote:Yes, absolutely. When you play hours a day, small differences like that are huge. It's like having a piece of a popcorn kernel stuck in your teeth. It's a small piece of popcorn, but in the universe of your mouth it feels pretty damn big.George wrote:Either way, 24" vs 24.75", the difference in distance between from nut to 1st fret would be 0.042" or a gnats knacker over 1mm.
Are you going to notice that difference while playing? I don't.
You guys must be blessed with big phalanges. A 24-inch scale guitar is the difference between me using my ring finger and pinky to fret the distance of two frets compared to a 24.75" scale guitar. That's how short my fingers are.Ankhanu wrote:Nah. A 10" difference barely registers for me anymore, switching between my Jaguar, Strat, Tele, VI and Jazz Bass all the time. You notice it at first, but your brain and fingers adapt.
Thank you. Think I'm going to save money to commission a luthier for a custom guitar. That 47mm neck width on the red special is a little too formidabletimhulio wrote:So there you are. There is one guitar which matches your specs.
I'm with Ankhanu on this, I can do chords on a 34" bass but it's a bit of a stretch for me (though chords on bass sound wrong to me).mountain2012 wrote:You guys must be blessed with big phalanges. A 24-inch scale guitar is the difference between me using my ring finger and pinky to fret the distance of two frets compared to a 24.75" scale guitar. That's how short my fingers are.Ankhanu wrote:Nah. A 10" difference barely registers for me anymore, switching between my Jaguar, Strat, Tele, VI and Jazz Bass all the time. You notice it at first, but your brain and fingers adapt.
The Harley Benton version had a 42mm nut.mountain2012 wrote:That 47mm neck width on the red special is a little too formidable
635mm scale, or 25"timhulio wrote:I'll bet the Harley Benton version is 24 3/4" scale though. There's no way they'd retool for a single model.