T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1944.61 | Travelling Guitars | ERLANG::SUDAMA | | Mon Nov 03 1986 10:42 | 15 |
| Has anybody ever tried a "travelling guitar"? I've seen several
ads recently for such things, which basically consist of a full
size guitar neck with a reduced size acoustic body, which makes
them easier to transport. The ones I have seen advertised have
very thin, narrow, and somewhat short bodies. The idea is that
they are very convenient to drag around on planes and things like
that.
Obviously the sound quality must suffer, but I'm curious to know
if any of these instruments have any utility at all. If anyone
has seen or played one of these oddities, I'd like to know how they
felt about it.
- Ram
|
1944.1 | Probably a Chiquita | COOKIE::G_HOUSE | Give a little | Wed Aug 22 1990 18:32 | 19 |
| I think I remember reading something awhile back that said Keaggy had a
Chiquita travel guitar. What you described sounds like one. It's a
little bitty thing shaped like an exagerated coke bottle, one pickup
and a short scale.
Van Halen used on on the song Little Guitars and Michael J. Fox had one
in the infamous "giant speaker" scene in "Back to the Future" (the
first one).
There are several small guitars around designed for travel, but the
disadvantage with many of them is the goofy short scale.
Stewart-McDonalds sells kits to build three or four body style models
with a 16.5 inch scale length. I think the kits were about $150 or so.
Another option something like a Steinberger headless guitar copy. I
think that would be ideal for travel. I believe Hohner still makes
one.
Greg
|
1944.2 | | PNO::HEISER | strong tower | Wed Aug 22 1990 19:14 | 8 |
| I'm not sure what a Chiquita is, but it is shaped like a mini-Les Paul.
He used it on "Play Thru Me - 'Papa Song'", "The Wind & The Wheat - 'Shore
to Shore'" as well as "Underground - 'Paid in Full'" which he does on the
video.
If you Coloradians wish, I can bring it with me next week (the video).
Mike
|
1944.3 | Robin Guitars makes one. | POGO::HENDERSON | Fun with Flesh! | Wed Aug 22 1990 19:58 | 8 |
|
Robin guitars makes a short scale guitar. Looks like
a mini strat. If memory serves me, they run about $350.00.
DonH
|
1944.4 | | CSC32::H_SO | I'm reliable: Made in Korea | Thu Aug 23 1990 00:09 | 9 |
|
Yeah, EVH played one of those mini Pauls for "Little Guitars".
And if my memory serves me right, I think it's exactly 1/2 of
the full size Paul.
I think these tiny axes are cool. I've considered gettin' a kit
from Stu-Mac...
J.
|
1944.5 | Return of the tiny guitars | KIRKTN::JHYNDMAN | Life in the bus lane | Thu Aug 23 1990 06:02 | 6 |
| I've seen Ricky Scaggs,the country guitarist/multi instrumentalist,play
a tiny Tele,about the size of a mandolin,and it had a 'B bender fitted.
Also Ry Cooder regularly plays slide on a half-size electric,I've seen
it live and on video,but can't make out the model(looks like a mini
Vox)
|
1944.6 | mini-mania | MILKWY::JACQUES | I Need a Miracle | Thu Aug 23 1990 09:40 | 19 |
| The instrument Ricky Scaggs plays is a Fender "Mandocaster".
The mini guitars generally have necks which are normal width, only the
scale length of the neck changes. The mini Les Pauls I've seen have
one humbucking pickup, and the mini Strats have two singles. Stewart
Mac now offers mini Flying V's, mini Explorers, and a *mini-Bass*.
Guild came out with a strange little Bass a couple years back that
uses Silicon Strings. It produced incledibly low pitch sound for
an instrument only about 24" long
I agree that a Steinberger headless (The small one with no body wings)
makes a better travel-guitar than one of these mini-guitars. Even the
Steinberger with body wings fits into an incedibly small package. My
cousin uses one, and when I got into his car one day, I thought he had
a racquet-ball racquet on the seat, when in fact it was his guitar.
Of course, these are a lot more money than most of the mini guitars.
The Hohner copies can be picked up used for around $300.
Mark
|
1944.7 | | AQUA::ROST | Mahavishnu versus Motormouth | Thu Aug 23 1990 09:47 | 17 |
| Re: .6
A Hohner G3T (Strat pickup setup) is in the MA WantAdvertiser right now
for $175.....
East Coast Sound was advertising these awhile ago for $350 or so with
gig bag.
The Chiquitas were originally expensive custom jobs made by luthier Dan
Erlewine; then Hondo got the rights to crank them out; they even made a
six-string bass model!! Despite the short scale, they are tuned to
concert pitch; the Robin mentioned is an "octave guitar", i.e. tuned an
octave up. There were also some mini-Paul and Strat guitars coming out
of Japan under the D'Mini name a few years ago, and Silver Street made
a Chiquita clone called the Taxi as well.
Brian
|
1944.8 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | The sea refuses no river.... | Thu Aug 23 1990 10:42 | 12 |
| The Chiquita company was in part owned vby Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top. Last time
I saw top he played a bright yellow one (maybe that's where I got the
inspiration for a yellow tele) on several tunes.
There were several other companies that made them also. Most of them
didn't intonate well, used cheeze dog electronics and needed meduim to
heavy gage strings to get a tension that was consistant with a light
gage string on a full size.
Wish I had one....
dbii
|
1944.9 | may be wrong | SALEM::TAYLOR_J | | Thu Aug 23 1990 10:44 | 3 |
| My expierience{sp?} with mini guitars is that they are very tough
to keep in tune.
|
1944.10 | Backpack guitar? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Fri Aug 24 1990 12:09 | 14 |
|
Rick Levine, guitarist for The Limit, owns probably exactly
what you're looking for. He called it a "backpack" guitar and said
it was his beach guitar and I guess he got it from somewhere in
Albany N.Y.
It looked to me to be maybe 3/4 scale with a ukealele body.
Not to much on sound projection, but who cares when you're flying
on an airline?
Has anyone else heard of the "backpack" guitar?
Joe
|
1944.11 | Backpack Guitars From NJ | AQUA::ROST | Mahavishnu versus Motormouth | Fri Aug 24 1990 12:22 | 8 |
| I remember seeing one like that made by a guy in New Jersey, he even
had twelve string and 5-string banjo versions!!! He used to advertise
in GP.
They are built pretty cheaply (plywood) and with the small bodies sound
pretty weird, but for their intended purpose....
Brian
|
1944.12 | waaaaa | ICS::BUCKLEY | Third generation got nuthin to say! | Fri Aug 24 1990 12:27 | 7 |
| The best small guitar I've seen/played is owned by our very own
Greg House!!! I forget the make of it, but it was a very well built
guitar that sounded nice to boot!
I want one.
Buck, who could be doing speed scales on his way to Dallas Tuesday! ;^(
|
1944.13 | vagabond | FROST::SIMON | Birds can't row boats | Fri Aug 24 1990 13:24 | 16 |
|
I believe the "backpack" guitar is made by Vagabond Guitars. I
tried one of these out at the Newport Folk Festival. They had
a stand there. Actually they were quite well made and sounded
pretty good considering how small they were. They actually have
a full size scale fretboard. They only reason they are so small
is cause the body is small. After I played it for a few minutes
I found it very easy to get used to. It played just like a
regular guitar.
These are acoustic guitars by the way. You can get one with a
built in pickup though. I believe the price on them started at
just below $300 for a stripped down one.
_gary
|
1944.14 | I rarely travel anymore | COOKIE::G_HOUSE | Give a little | Fri Aug 24 1990 19:25 | 6 |
| re: .12
Wanna buy it? Dan's (.0) considering it now, maybe you guys can make
competating offers on it.
;^)
|
1944.15 | | CSC32::H_SO | Insider on Hyundai: I drive a Chevy! | Fri Aug 24 1990 20:10 | 4 |
|
Capitalism at its best!!!
J.
|
1944.16 | just thinking about all the possibilities | MAIL::EATOND | In tents | Mon Aug 27 1990 18:27 | 10 |
| Out of curiosity...
If one were to find a cheap used guitar, say, a strat type by one
of the cheap makers (Memphis, Cort, Harmony, etc.) that had a playable
neck... Would there be any harm (apart from the appearance) in cutting
into the body (and perhaps the headstock) to reduce its length and
width?
Dan
|
1944.17 | Hmm... | COOKIE::G_HOUSE | Give a little | Mon Aug 27 1990 18:55 | 4 |
| Depending on the body style, you'd probably open up the control
cavity. You might think about cutting a new (smaller) body for it.
Greg
|
1944.18 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Mon Aug 27 1990 21:41 | 2 |
| I knew a guy who did just that. I was playable, and kindof fun because
it was so abused. It's long gone now.
|
1944.19 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | The sea refuses no river.... | Tue Aug 28 1990 14:57 | 4 |
| If all your lookng to do is travel with a guitar, get a bolt on and
remove the neck and stuff neck abnd body in yer suitcase
dbii
|
1944.20 | | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Tue Aug 28 1990 22:31 | 7 |
|
Cut the body, and you'll lose tone and sustain. I would not recommend
doing this to your even a play-it-once-a-year-guitar if it has a
decent tone. It'll never sound the same...
J.
|
1944.21 | YYYAAAWWNNN | BHUNA::IGOLDIE | GOIN' OFF AT THE DEEP END | Sun Sep 16 1990 18:41 | 5 |
| I saw Steve Earle play a 4 string Tele on friday night......between
yawns.
STAYNZ
|
1944.22 | Martin 000? | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Mon Sep 17 1990 10:28 | 5 |
| I know this isn't exactly what's being discussed here, but . . .
I once played on a Martin 000-something that was absolutely astounding.
It's a tiny acoustic with a short scale, a wide neck, and a mretty
mighty time for something that small. Because of ths short neck, you
could bend the strings like an electric.
|
1944.23 | Small Guitar Encounter! | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | OK...Who turned on the lights? | Mon Sep 17 1990 10:54 | 11 |
|
Hey.. I played a music man this week... AWESOME NECK!!! I'm not
kidding!! It was incredible! Smooth low factory action, not fretting
out, loose as a goose strings on a 25.5" scale neck... I am
impressed!!!
Steve
|
1944.24 | some Martin scales ... | E::EVANS | | Mon Sep 17 1990 12:28 | 7 |
|
Martin 000-series guitars (14 frets clear) have a 24.9" scale.
Martin D -series guitars have a 25.4 scale.
Some Martin scales go down to 17", but these are rather unusual.
Jim
|
1944.25 | Eat your hearts out. | MCIS2::NOVELLO | I've fallen, and I can't get up | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:39 | 7 |
|
I bought one for my 4 year old son. It is a "Tender" strat.
It has 3 pickups, and can get 5 positions on the switch
and it sounds very close to a strat. I paid $100 for it.
Guy
|
1944.26 | Travel Guitars | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Ren and Stimpy...the Lost Episodes | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:32 | 8 |
|
Does anybody own a "travel guitar"? I 'm talkin' about the Chaquita
or the one reviewed in GP that comes with a Rockman ($945!) whose
name I can't remember at the moment. I travel an ass-load and it
would be nice to pack a little ax and my Molecular Stack Marshall
for those hotel stays.
-pat
|
1944.27 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | grep?? | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:43 | 3 |
| Steinbergers work well in that role...
dbii who can't wait to travel with his...
|
1944.28 | Wear dark glasses and flash 'em yer badge | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:54 | 12 |
| I thought we had a topic on travel guitars in here already...
I used to have an Austin Hatchett travel guitar that was great! Played
and looked nice! My only complaint was that it wasn't terribly
comfortable to play without a strap. I bought it when I was working a
job where I traveled a lot and it was great for those trips!
It did generate a lot of questions in airports though... Possibly
because it's little gig bag looked kind of like a gun case. I never
had any trouble with the airline security people though.
Greg
|
1944.29 | Have AXE will travel | SAHQ::ROSENKRANZ | Less is More | Thu Apr 23 1992 08:41 | 33 |
|
I've recently had the same thoughts about travel guitars, and these
are the ones I've found on the market. I've not had a chance to kick
the tires on them yet:
Acoustic:
Essential Guitar, 2lbs2oz 6string 32"long 7" wide 24" scale
15 frets, ~$365 (201)983-9153
Martin Backpacker (similar to essential) ~$170 + $29 for case
(800)345-3103
Vagabond 32"long 24.5"scale 2.5# 21 frets start at $339
(518)758-1690
Outbound 36"long 25.4" scale length 19 frets, ~$350
(800)487-1887
Electric:
Mighty Mite - a minature LP, I've seen these on 48th St. in NYC
Chiquita- 4.25# 27" length , 1 humbucker (512)472-4859
Gadden claims to have "smallest full-scale guitar possible"
800-582-2297 starts at $518
My impression is that all these guitars have comprimises but as someone
said "They're better than no guitar at all". Definitely designed for the
road.
|
1944.30 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | grep?? | Thu Apr 23 1992 11:06 | 6 |
| Wehn I last saw ZZ Top Billy Gibbons played several Chiquita's (I've
heard that he's part owner of the company but don;t known if that's
true). They all sounded fine to me, if there were any compromises in
the guitar he certainly wasn't held back by them.
dbii
|
1944.31 | | MANTHN::EDD | Real programs in DCL? .NOT.! | Thu Apr 23 1992 12:02 | 4 |
| Didn't John Kay of Steppenwolf once endorse/use/invent a little
guitar called a "pack-axe"?
Edd
|
1944.32 | Have AMP, will travel?? | SAHQ::ROSENKRANZ | Less is More | Mon Apr 27 1992 13:20 | 5 |
| Can anyone give me some advise of suggestions for an AMP suitable
for traveling and use with a travel guitar? I have ruled out my
Fender Twin Reverb. :+)
jim
|
1944.33 | | 35596::REITER | | Mon Apr 27 1992 13:42 | 25 |
| There might be a separate note for this somewhere, so sue me ;7)
but there are a few different ways to go:
The cheapest are the micro-amps marketed by Fender, Marshall, and Dean
Markley. They are powered by a 9-volt MN1904 battery. I have the
Marshall MS-2 microstack. It has two channels (!), tone control, and a
headphone output jack that silences it, and a belt clip. It cost $40.
I like it; it's better than nothing, good for hotel rooms, tiny,
doesn't eat batteries, and I was able to use it with headphones on a
long flight.
You can also roll your own from Radio Shack but that might be below the
minimum level of acceptability (?).
Then you move up to the Rockman-type headphone amps at around the $100
price point. Someone else can comment on these.
There's also the Pignose that has a speaker and runs on batteries.
Don't know much about it, either.
At this point, you are into plug-in jobs at the 10~15-amp range; not
too handy for air travel, but OK for auto trips, I guess.
Next.
\Gary
|
1944.34 | about $125 9 years ago | EZ2GET::STEWART | You're just supposed to sit here? | Mon Apr 27 1992 14:01 | 13 |
|
I have a boss headphone amp that came out a little after the Rockman
emerged. Mine has switchable clean/distortion settings with separate
preamp and volume sliders. It also has switchable chorus/delay with
depth and rate sliders for the chorus. It has two headphone jacks, an
instrument input (naturally), a mic input (that has it's own slider), a
stereo line level input that you can drive from a walkman headphone
output, and a jack for something called the P-bus.
Add a pair of those little powered speakers and you've got yourself a
very flexible little solid-state traveling practice rig.
|
1944.35 | Another recommendation of the Marshall MS-2 | GOES11::G_HOUSE | The rack is a torture device, right? | Mon Apr 27 1992 14:06 | 8 |
| Personally, I don't like headphone amps (or headphones in general) very
much, so I prefer something with a little speaker. I have a Marshall
MS-2 that works good. My wife got it for me for Christmas year before
last, kind of as a joke, but it works great for a travel amp. Doesn't
sound like a stack (as the ad's might claim), but it's good enough.
What do you expect for $35 anyway?
Greg
|
1944.36 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Aunty Emme ... It's a TWISTER! | Mon Apr 27 1992 14:07 | 4 |
| -1
If it has a line out, you should plug it into Coop's SP-1000 and see
what it sounds like!! 8^)
|
1944.37 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Ren and Stimpy...the Lost Episodes | Mon May 04 1992 08:26 | 6 |
|
Anybody know the overall length of the headless Hohner? The 2GT (with
Steinberger trem/SD pickups?) is going for $350 at East Coast Music
Mall. If it's about the same size as a Chaquita...
-pat(man)
|
1944.38 | does this help? | EZ2GET::STEWART | You're just supposed to sit here? | Mon May 04 1992 09:53 | 7 |
|
The real thing (Steinberger GL??) is 32" in the gig bag.
|
1944.39 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Ren and Stimpy...the Lost Episodes | Mon May 04 1992 13:26 | 5 |
|
Yes, that does help. Thanks a lot. I was guessing that it would be
about 5 inches longer than the Chaquita (27").
-pat
|
1944.40 | exit | WMOIS::MAY_B | IT'S LIKE THE SAME, ONLY DIFFERENT! | Wed May 06 1992 08:52 | 9 |
| On the topic of small guitars,, Last Friday I took a the tour of the
Martin guitar factory in PA. We were one of the first to see their new
"Backpack Guitar".. It reminded me of Russian instrument because of
its triangle shape body, short thin neck and small headstock. They
haven't established a price yet, but I gotta have one>
Bruce
|
1944.41 | Did you play one? | CUPMK::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Wed May 06 1992 10:59 | 4 |
|
Bruce, How's it sound? The Martin backpack guitar?
Justine
|
1944.42 | | WMOIS::MAY_B | IT'S LIKE THE SAME, ONLY DIFFERENT! | Wed May 06 1992 12:57 | 10 |
| Re Hows the Backpack martin sound??
Sorry to say that none of them were finished. They were in various
stages of assembly (or dis-assembly). The tour Guide led me to believe
that they had just finished the first few a couple of days before but
were no wheres to be seen. Darn!!! He had no guestimate on price
either.
Bruce
|
1944.43 | Never forgets a lick... | BAHTAT::CARR | Dave Carr 845-2317 | Thu May 07 1992 08:16 | 5 |
| I saw a picture of a small guitar in a UK mag which was said
to be Japanese and had an integral amplifier and speaker.
I think it was called the "Elephant guitar", but of course
it could have been the April edition of the mag....
|
1944.44 | Martin BackPack owner !! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue Jul 20 1993 11:25 | 11 |
| I just traded a couple of guitars into a music store for a Martin
BackPack guitar. It came with a Martin strap and nylon carrying
case. It is a little wimpy in the tone/volume department, but
passable. The fact that it is not too loud is actually a plus.
You can get thrown out of camping areas for playing too loud.
I'll be on a 2 week vacation starting this Friday. Can't wait !!
Wherever I go, the BackPack guitar comes with me.
Mark
|
1944.45 | back-packing the great north-east | VOYAGR::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Jul 21 1993 13:45 | 36 |
| More rambling on the Martin backpack guitar.
It had a pricetag of $199 including a case and strap. I didn't
pay cash (traded). If I had, I would have expected them to knock
~$25.00 off the price.
The guitar is constucted of mahogany with what appears to
be a solid top, but it could be plywood. It has a simple oil
finish and the pores of the mahogany are not filled.
The neck on this guitar is very comfortable and has ~15 frets.
The Body begins at the 15th fret so you get full access to all
the frets. I did some flatpicking with it last night and found
the neck to be quite nice.
The small body size presents one minor nit which takes
some getting used to...If you are used to anchoring your wrist to
the top of the guitar (like I am) you find there is no where to rest
your hand on the top, so you end up resting it against the rim of
the guitar. It helps if you are used to sweep picking. You definately
need to wear the strap even when sitting down.
The cheesiest feature on this is the finish. It appears to
be an oil finish with no paste wood filler. This leaves the grain
of the mahogany open and gives it a fairly rough feel. I may refinish
it later on when I'm working on other refinishing projects.
The case is a really nice black nylon bag with shoulder strap
and accessory pouch. The strap is an adjustable nylon strap with
the Martin logo.
I'm starting a 2-week vacation on Friday. I'll post a better
review after I put a few hundred miles on it.
Mark
|
1944.46 | So... | ROADKL::HALL | | Wed Oct 20 1993 13:22 | 5 |
| So... How was the Martin BackPacker on your trip? I've seen 'em in the
Music Emporium catalog for $179 now. Does it feel like (fret) like a
steel-string flatttop?
Charlie
|
1944.47 | GOOD WALL DECORATION | AKOCOA::MAY_B | IT'S LIKE THE SAME, ONLY DIFFERENT! | Wed Oct 27 1993 13:54 | 14 |
| I have one.... it hangs on the wall (most of the time). It sounds
horrible, has absolutely no balance (nose heavy), and the only
comfortable way to play it is when you laying down on the couch!!!
Theres nowhere to rest you right hand or forearm. Sounds like a banjo!!!
The case handle came unstitched two days after I got it. The action
was like every other Martin shipped from the factory,, High!!!! but I
fixed that. Other that that they aint bad.
Can you tell I am real happy with it???
Bruce
|
1944.48 | plane traveling with guitar | LUDWIG::ADAMS | | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:39 | 15 |
| Sorry if this is in the wrong place, but I did not have
time to search for this topic...
Have people carried their guitars on the plane in a gig
bag as a carry on in the overhead compartments? My guitar
teacher, who does some touring, says this is how he travels
with his. I am just wondering if anyone else has had any
experience doing this. I don't want them to give me a hard
time and force me to check it in at the last minute since it
is important for me to take only carry on luggage on this
particular trip.
Thanks for any advice/experience.
_kathy
|
1944.49 | My $.02 | MPGS::MARKEY | Rock 'n Roll Propeller Head | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:02 | 11 |
| Steve St Croix, who writes for Mix Magazine, recommends Steinberger
guitars for this purpose (they tend to be pretty compact). Not only
do they fit in the overhead bin, they can even be played through
a headphone amp on the plane! (something to do while you're flying)
However, seeing people squash elephant sized "overnight bags" into
the overhead compartments, I would never even consider this; imagine
one of these things pushing against the neck of your guitar. Either
get an ATA approved flight case with a sturdy lock and check it as
baggage, or leave it at home.
Brian
|
1944.50 | Call 1st to find out what they will do for you. | SLOHAN::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:34 | 13 |
| I seen lots of people bring the guitars on board as carry on...call the
airline your are going with and ask....they will most likely put it in
a closet (not the overhead area)
once coming back from Dallas, a woman brought her cello on board, she
straped it in in an empty seat :') (unless she paid for its seat, I
didn't ask !)
I've seen them in soft and hard cases btw...me I've never brought mine
on a trip, hell I've never took mine out of the case in two years...I
just read GUITAR for the Debbie Gibson updates :')
Chris
|
1944.51 | NEVER AGAIN!!! | MADMXX::KNOX | | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:37 | 12 |
| I had a Steinberger bass that I took on a plane trip on a couple
of occasions. I had good luck and bad. On one trip, I was able to
fit it in an overhead that wasn't stuffed (an VERY RARE occurrence!!)
On another occasion, I was able to store it on the coat closet up near
first class. On the last trip I ever took a guitar on, I was forced
to stow my stein-bugger with loose baggage in the cargo hold. I was
allowed to bring it on the plane, but the carry-on containers were
not wide enough, the stewardess woduln't put it in the closet and would
not allow me to place it under the seat... So, she took it and put
it in the cargo hold .... NEVER AGAIN!!!!
/Billy_K
|
1944.52 | | SEND::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:39 | 4 |
|
See also topic 1507 for tips in case you can't go the carry-on route.
JP
|
1944.53 | amen | EZ2GET::STEWART | an E-ticket ride at Neuro-Disney | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:40 | 8 |
|
Definitely gotta second the Steinberger recommendation...everything
else is too big for convenient carry-on...take along your wireless unit
and serenade the cockpit crew!
Neat thing about the Steinies is...in case of emergency you can use it
to open up cabin walls -- they're tough!
|
1944.54 | | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Over my head | Wed Aug 17 1994 11:48 | 8 |
| I carried on my guitar when I left Scotland and had no problems with
it.The stewardess put in a wee cupboard that devided the club class
from the rest of us.When I arrived,it was in as good as condition as I
put it in.There was no way in hell I was going to put it in the cargo
hold!
ian
|
1944.55 | | GOES11::HOUSE | How could I have been so blind? | Wed Aug 17 1994 12:07 | 23 |
| Back in the mid 80s, I was travelling a lot for work and often took
guitars with me. What I found was that if you called and asked, they'd
rather consistantly tell you that you couldn't carry it on, it'd have
to be checked, but if you showed up with it and just took it to the
gate with you, no problem.
I've seen gig bags with hangers on them (or places to put one one), so
if the plane has a closet for hanging bags, something like that would
probably work. The overhead bins vary in size and shape, some you
could get an electric into, some you couldn't.
On one flight, the stewardess put it in a little closet with a bunch of
other slightly oversized carryon baggage. That was ok, but the thing
was a bit overstuffed and the tolex on my guitar case was torn in a
little spot. No big deal, not like freezing the thing to sub-zero
temperatures and then putting a fork lift arm through it in the baggage
compartment below...
I did care about my case cosmetics, so I got a little travel guitar
not long after that. Fit on the plane great, didn't fit on me very
well.
Greg
|
1944.56 | Just show up with it. | SALEM::SHAW | | Wed Aug 17 1994 12:39 | 7 |
|
Like Greg reffered too, I always take a guitar with me when I travel
to see my folks back in Europe. What I do, is just show up with it.
The stewardess usually takes it from me and puts it in some closet,
I have never had a problem with this.
Shaw
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1944.57 | rifle cases on planes | ULYSSE::WILSON | John, 828-5631 | Thu Aug 18 1994 02:32 | 10 |
| I have a stick bass (Westone Rail) which I bought without a case. I
looked around and found that a rifle case fits it perfectly. But I
can imagine the reaction when I walk into the airport with it,
especially Heathrow in London which has very tight security.
Any ideas for making it obvious that this is not a weapon?
Regards
John
|
1944.58 | things to avoid | EZ2GET::STEWART | an E-ticket ride at Neuro-Disney | Thu Aug 18 1994 08:14 | 9 |
|
Well, for one thing, the ski mask and those camo pants have got to
go...
And don't even think of using an old ammo box as your gig bag...
|
1944.59 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Rock 'n Roll Propeller Head | Thu Aug 18 1994 10:44 | 10 |
| A weapon!!!! Look, if you whack someone over the head with your Westone
bass, which is about all *it* is good for, it is a weapon. A *firearm*,
on the other hand, is *not* a weapon until you use it as one.
Besides, on Newbury Street in Boston, I once got an obnoxious Scientology
type to go away *fast* by telling him my Steinberger was a high-power
rifle.
This Terminology Moment Brought To You By Brian
(A proud *firearm*, not weapon, owner)
|
1944.60 | | GOES11::HOUSE | How could I have been so blind? | Thu Aug 18 1994 11:08 | 1 |
| This is my rifle, and this is my gun...
|
1944.62 | | E::EVANS | | Fri Aug 19 1994 12:50 | 10 |
|
My problem with the gigbag plan is that if they say it has to go into the
cargo hold, it goes into the cargo hold in a gigbag and not a hardcase.
My solution has been to have over-the-top hardcases and check them.
Unlike a previous note, the cargo holds are heated and pressurized
(remember this is where pets travel). I have a Mark Leaf case for my
acoustic. I think an Anvil case would protect just about any electric.
Jim
|
1944.63 | gigging with the NRA | RICKS::CALCAGNI | This is a dream band: no guitars | Mon Aug 22 1994 10:09 | 5 |
| Don't know if this was mentioned here before, but Steinies being
mistaken for firearms is serious business. There was a news story
last year about someone who was shot and killed by police because they
mistook his gig-bagged Steinberger for a rifle.
|
1944.64 | | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | Sam, Subsystems Engineering @CXO | Sat Aug 27 1994 20:15 | 14 |
| re: .51
Geez Billy, thanks for letting me know my Steiny has been thru such
hell! :-) (Just kidding, I love the guitar and couldn't be happier
with it. Thanks.)
For all you bass players out there, I highly recommend the Steinberger
XM2 ("normal" (sorta "strat" shaped) body, not the little rectangular
thing) as both a travelling guitar and a "main" axe. Not cheap, but worth
every penny. My wife hates the headless look, but hey, it's *my* bass.
:-)
-- Sam
|