Creepies said:So here's a question about 7/8 scale bodies -
If you had a 7/8 scale Stratocaster body, everything is routed for the same size hardware - but would you have to have a 7/8 pickguard cut to fit the shape? Or would it just be a larger guard on a smaller body? It seems like a regular sized guard would be too big or fit strangely.
Just curious. :dontknow:
Wyliee said:Creepies said:So here's a question about 7/8 scale bodies -
If you had a 7/8 scale Stratocaster body, everything is routed for the same size hardware - but would you have to have a 7/8 pickguard cut to fit the shape? Or would it just be a larger guard on a smaller body? It seems like a regular sized guard would be too big or fit strangely.
Just curious. :dontknow:
The only current offering is rear rout only. No pickguard.
The body is only $50 more than a regular body and the Peghead is an extra $45 since they have to carve it by hand. Other than that, you can price the rest off the Warmoth site. The access to the high notes is amazing. I wish more people could experience these particular builds.rodlabjr said:WOW this guitar just blew me away!
Gregg, can you tell me how much would this guitar cost me? I'm planning on ordering one myself. :icon_biggrin:
Creepies said:Wyliee said:Creepies said:So here's a question about 7/8 scale bodies -
If you had a 7/8 scale Stratocaster body, everything is routed for the same size hardware - but would you have to have a 7/8 pickguard cut to fit the shape? Or would it just be a larger guard on a smaller body? It seems like a regular sized guard would be too big or fit strangely.
Just curious. :dontknow:
The only current offering is rear rout only. No pickguard.
Thanks Wyliee - -
Any plans for a top route in the future?
This is only avaiable to 24.75" scale with 24 frets... :icon_thumright:CarteBlanche said:Would there be any issues if I wanted a 25.5 inch scale? Would the high fret access still be amazing?
Is the old wood template not able to be pieced back together to make a new template? :icon_scratch:Gregg said:Creepies said:Wyliee said:Creepies said:So here's a question about 7/8 scale bodies -
If you had a 7/8 scale Stratocaster body, everything is routed for the same size hardware - but would you have to have a 7/8 pickguard cut to fit the shape? Or would it just be a larger guard on a smaller body? It seems like a regular sized guard would be too big or fit strangely.
Just curious. :dontknow:
The only current offering is rear rout only. No pickguard.
Thanks Wyliee - -
Any plans for a top route in the future?
I'll probably get in trouble for this one but we can actually do a top rout right now. Our old wood patterns for the pickguard fell apart so we can't make a pickguard for it. Ken doesn't want to offer the top rout version without being able to provide a pickguard which makes good business sense.
Not many things do that. Not even that "special" bean burrito.tfarny said:I think it's cool that this thread is still giving people GAS two years after Gregg first posted it.
I was thinking the same thing!tfarny said:I think it's cool that this thread is still giving people GAS two years after Gregg first posted it.
stubhead said:I'll try that one - the placement of the pickups on a Strat result in certain sounds because of where they are - PROPORTIONATE to overall string length. If a pickup is "biting off" a string at 40% of it's length, it's going to take the same tonal sample regardless of length (disregarding the obvious difference in brightness a longer string tuned to the same pitch will exhibit).
So, the exact question you want to ask of Warmoth (or a 7/8ths guitar owner) is whether the pickup placement has been adjusted, proportionately, to the overall scale length. Everything effects everything.... :-\ If I had a Strat and I really wanted to know the answer, I would measure each pickup's distance from the nut and calculate that as a percentage of 25.5". Then I would multiply that by the smaller scale length, and ask Warmoth "is the neck pickups at X? Is the middle pick at Y? Is the bridge pickup here?" etc. For what it's worth, Warmoth can put pickups anywhere you specify too, for a charge.
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