- Messages
- 3,512
Check it out! And also....how about that cool new t-shirt? If we offered that for sale, would you buy it?
Warmoth is now profiling!!??![]()
I used to think that until I got a Fatback. Just awesome for thumb over grip. (I think the shoulders are my issues so this new D shape actually might feel bigger to me than the Fatback)Since I don't have hands the size of King Kong's, I'll stick with the Standard Thin C.
There are more programs than you’d think with all the different scales and head options. The D’s were no small feat. I chiseled away one neck at a time in between juggling necks on the machines. Happy they are available now.Time to launch the .84 C shape!! C'mon Aaron! Hurry, it's just a lil programing..................
Having trained in CNC, NC, and manual, I can commiserate! It's fun to create the programs but not so fun when ramped/QC'd up to production specs, not to mention factoring in the business side of things. The builder is a good but basic analog to what Warmoth does operationally.There are more programs than you’d think with all the different scales and head options. The D’s were no small feat. I chiseled away one neck at a time in between juggling necks on the machines. Happy they are available now.![]()
Time to launch the .84 C shape!! C'mon Aaron! Hurry, it's just a lil programing..................
I could live with .835 at the first fret if .84 is too much. HURRY!Just to pile on with what @u.9 and @JacobJames have already said: adding one more neck profile is no small feat.
One new neck profile equates to: 1 new profile x 23 neck models x 9 construction types x 4 nut widths.
![]()
Awe, c'mon James it was a labor of love and you are now refreshed and up for more!! YAY!That’s some great noodling Aaron! Nothing like that first strum on a new neck.![]()
Spudneck that’s what we’d call it. We’ll need a potato punch brand.Awe, c'mon James it was a labor of love and you are now refreshed and up for more!! YAY!