T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1529.1 | lipsticks on a strat look cool | STAR::TPROULX | | Tue Oct 24 1989 10:42 | 7 |
| Brian, it sounds like they've really expanded their line.
The last catalog I saw didn't have that much. What do they
get for the Danelectro-style pickups? They look cool, but
does anyone know what they sound like compared to Strat
pickups?
-Tom
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1529.2 | low-tech | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Tue Oct 24 1989 11:28 | 17 |
| My opinion of Chandler from the bodys, necks, and preamps is that
they are all pretty low end stuff. I guess for the money the
preamps aren't bad (rack mount preamp ~$200, stomp box ~$125).
The bodies and necks I have seen appeared to be much lower
quality than Warmouth or even Stew-Mac.
$200 for a neck ?? $300 for a Body ?? For that much money, you
can get some of the more exotic components from Warmouth, and those
feature the compound radius, as well as exotic wood. For the price
of the whole instrument ($700 - $1000) one could purchase the real
thing (ie. A real Fender, a real Les Paul, etc.). From what I
understand the Danelectro pickups are pretty close to the originals,
but keep in mind, the originals are pretty crude pickups to begin
with and I would imagine they must be fairly easy to copy.
Mark
|
1529.3 | sheesh! | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Bad Company, 'till the day I die | Tue Oct 24 1989 11:35 | 10 |
| RE: $200 for a neck; $300 for a body?! My brand new Strat (AMER STD)
was $415 for %^&*$# sake! Is the stuff supposed to be superior to the
wood that Fender uses or is this just a "sucker" bet preying on someone
who gets off on building their own axe?
I priced all the parts I needed to build my own Strat from "another"
catalog (configured JUST like my Standard) and it was over $700 without
tax or shipping! I don't get it......
Perplexed_Steve
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1529.4 | Guitars are like Cars | ORION::WIEGLER | | Tue Oct 24 1989 16:00 | 6 |
| Well sure, if you build something from parts it is usually gonna
be more expensive than buying it preassembled.
Have you ever looked at the price of automobile parts and figured
how much it would cost to build your car from parts? It would cost
a fortune. It must be same for guitars.
|
1529.5 | yep.... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Bad Company, 'till the day I die | Wed Oct 25 1989 09:12 | 11 |
| Yep to .4, I know what ya means. What "perplexes" me is the ads pushing
"build your own guitar!". I'm trying to understand the motivation;
other than the "pride/craftsmanship" thing, it makes no financial
sense. I'm sure there are skilled luthiers out there that believe
they can actually make a better hand made instrument than the Fender
(for example) factory can put out. That must be it....I, personally
would be afraid to try it unless it was a low risk (cost) endeavor.
Later, and back to the note subject....sorry for the diversion.
Steve
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1529.6 | Hot Rod = Bucks | AQUA::ROST | Chickens don't take the day off | Wed Oct 25 1989 09:36 | 23 |
|
> Yep to .4, I know what ya means. What "perplexes" me is the ads pushing
> "build your own guitar!". I'm trying to understand the motivation;
> other than the "pride/craftsmanship" thing, it makes no financial
> sense.
I see a lot of people in here who have bought stock guitars, then
upgraded the pickups, tuners, whammy, neck, you name it. I always
wondered about the rationale of buying a $400 guitar and putting $300
of parts into it instead of just buying a $700 guitar all set up and
ready to go.
Anyway, starting from raw parts means you can build from the ground up
exactly the way you ike (assuming the parts you need are made). That's
the rationale.
BTW, the Chandler prices quoted were "manufacturer's list", not what
the dealer will charge you. I think you'll find new Les Pauls list for
over $1000, but stores sell them for about $6-700.
I'm not endorsing Chandler by any means, just trying to add a little
balance to the other replies.
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1529.7 | Bodies *look* cheap | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Thu Oct 26 1989 00:28 | 12 |
| I agree that building a component guitar has it's advantages, provided
the components are of high quality. The Chandler bodies and necks I
have seen do not appear to be the highest quality. For example, the
finishes appear to be sloppily applied, and just don't look anywhere
near as good as a Fender factory finish. I haven't seen *any* Chandler
bodies with a natural finish, which leads me to wonder if they use
wood with cosmetic defects, which are easily hidden under solid
color finishes.
Mark
|