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- Xref: sparky rec.music.makers.guitar:1098 alt.guitar:11077
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!unixhub!slacvm!waugh
- Organization: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
- Date: Tuesday, 29 Dec 1992 12:07:07 PST
- From: <WAUGH@SLACVM.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU>
- Message-ID: <92364.120707WAUGH@SLACVM.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU>
- Newsgroups: rec.music.makers.guitar,alt.guitar
- Subject: Re: build a warmoth(?) & composite materials in guitars
- References: <92357.203721SRJ102@psuvm.psu.edu>
- <MIZUTANT-291292102859@microlab7.med.upenn.edu>
- <1992Dec29.190830.10190@gtech.com>
- Lines: 72
-
- In article <1992Dec29.190830.10190@gtech.com>, trp@gtech.com (Tom R. Peterson
- (consultant)) says:
- >
- >A couple guitar building questions:
- >1) Does anyone know where to order Warmoth, or other good quality
- > guitar components, with the intention of building a guitar?
-
- Check the back pages of any popular guitar-oriented magazine. The ads abound.
-
- >2) Have you done this? Could you end up with a better stat for
- > the same money?
-
- Yes.
-
- Probably not. The cost of the individual components usually exceed the cost of
- an American Standard Stratocaster and case. Remember the parts are unfinished.
- Unless you have access to an automotive-type spray facility it will cost around
- $200 just to have the body covered with a professional-looking finish and we're
- not even talking about the neck yet. Let's look at a sample listing:
-
- 1. Ash or alder body, unfinished..........$150
- 2. Maple neck, unfinished................. 150
- 3. Floyd Rose tremelo..................... 100
- 4. Pickups, 2 humbuckers.................. 120
- 3 single coils................ 180
- 5. Tuners................................. 30
- 6. Pots, switch, wiring, shielding........ 25
- 7. Strap buttons.......................... 15
- 8. Pickguard.............................. 15
- 9. Case................................... 75
- 10. Strings................................ 5
- -----
- Total $685 (w/humbuckers)
- 745 (w/single coils)
-
- Remember, we haven't figured finishing into this total yet. Neither have we
- considered the cost of any specialized tools one might need, nor the time
- involved. What we have is a box full of parts, albeit nice ones, that cost
- about $150 more than an American Standard Stratocaster. With a nice looking
- finish we get up into the Les Paul Standard range. Any tools or otherwise
- and we can buy a Les Paul Custom, Jackson Soloist, etc. instead of our home-
- brewed, no-resale-value, "I made it myself." axe.
-
- If you want the experience of building a guitar from scratch, and I did, then
- do it for that reason. Don't think you're going to end up with a super-guitar
- for the price of a Korean clone. Building guitars as a hobby is a lot like
- building cars for a hobby; one never gets out what one puts in. It is done for
- the love of the activity and the education it provides. You decide how you're
- going to spend your time and money: building a guitar or buying one and
- practicing for those hours you don't spend spraying, sanding, buffing, wiring,
- mounting, fret leveling and dressing and the hundreds of other jobs that you
- didn't realize went into the production of the easiest guitar to make, the
- solid body. If you really want to spend some time and money build an arch top.
-
- >3) Someone posted that Steinberg guitars are made of composite materials.
- > I build R/C airplanes, and fiddle a bit with carbon fibre, fibre glass,
- > wood laminations, etc. Does anyone know about this?
-
- If you say you fiddle with that stuff, we believe you!
-
- >4) Ever considered making a solid tempered Damascus steel strat?
-
- I have enough of a time wearing a Les Paul for a four set gig. I'll let
- Herr Schwartzenegger play the "heavy metal."
-
- >Any info would be Appreciated!
-
- You're welcome, I'm sure.
-
- >trp@gtech.com
-
- Brian
-