banner

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

    Alright, I've got quite a few semi-hollow / hollow body guitar questions here:

    1. How well do Semihollow guitars cut through with some gain in a band situation? Do they benefit more from warmer pups or brighter pups?

    2. Would a semi-hollow / hollow body guitar benefit at all from a one piece Spruce top like an acoustic does? I realize that most tops on the 335 style bodies and the like are 2 piece tops, so I'm just curious

    3. How about some P-90's in a semi-hollow / hollow body.. yea or nay? (if you've got some personal experience, feel free to share.. good or bad)

    Any other general thoughts and impressions on semi hollow / hollow bodies are welcome.. I've got a few thoughts stirring around for my next guitar


    -alex
    -Alex

    *Proud Owner and Player of Guage guitars, Warmoth guitars, and Orange amps*

    Originally posted by HamerPlyr
    I'm already wearing the costume, and Fredericks of Hollywood on the corset and also on the panties, which, of course, have the "convenience crotch".

  • #2
    Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

    I tend to find hollowbody or semi=hollowbodies as warmer guitars that wouldn't necessary be though to cut through the mix - not that they can't

    when someone wants a guitar that cuts - i use a maple capped body, and bolt on or set maple neck
    it WILL cut

    as for the spruce top - I build an acoustic/electric with a chambered mahogany body and spruce top - but that's not what you're talking about
    I'd add a spruce top if you're looking to get a more accurate acoustic electric tone form a piezo bridge (but if you wnat the real deal you should throw a wooden acoustic style bridge on there too) but the electric guitar piezos are pretty darn good - you'll hear yours soon

    as for p-90s
    i'm dying to build a p-90 equipped guitar
    as for putting them in a hollow body - could work really nice
    i'd suggest rather either a mahogany body and neck and using 2 p-90s and going for that Who/townshend tone
    or 3 p-90s and a maple neck and getting anwyehre from strat territory to cut through the mix
    i think p-90s would round out your collection nicely
    Last edited by Blueline; 05-19-2004, 08:32 PM.
    Custom Guitar Builder - PM me if you're interested.
    Check out the new website and see the progress of felow forumites' guitars
    www.gaugeguitars.com
    Cheers!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

      1: No problem. Feedback can be a problem though. I like a warm sound, seems to me like overly bright pups would defeat the whole purpose. JMO.

      2: LA Guitar Factory near here builds some really nice jazz hollowbody electrics with carved one piece "tap tuned" tops using various tonewoods, spruce being one. Those I'm somewhat familiar with, they're very warm and sweet, great guitars for what they're intended for. I doubt if it would make that much difference in a rock setting, but I really don't know.

      3: Check out T-Bone Walker and Charlie Christian.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

        Forgot to mention that - pandemonium is dead on - p-90s are single coils after all and depending on the depth of the body, feedback could be a problem
        Custom Guitar Builder - PM me if you're interested.
        Check out the new website and see the progress of felow forumites' guitars
        www.gaugeguitars.com
        Cheers!

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

          One last bump
          -Alex

          *Proud Owner and Player of Guage guitars, Warmoth guitars, and Orange amps*

          Originally posted by HamerPlyr
          I'm already wearing the costume, and Fredericks of Hollywood on the corset and also on the panties, which, of course, have the "convenience crotch".

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

            Hi Fatty -

            FWIW a lot of 335 style guitars have laminated tops. In the acoustic guitar world, this would be "bad" as compared to a single piece of wood. There's some reason why the laminated tops are used in semi-hollow electrics, but I can't remember what it was right now. Might have been stability since a semi-hollow electric doesn't have the bracing that an acoustic top would have...

            Chip
            Heritage 535 Special, Warmoth frankenstrat, MIM Strat, & Taylor 314C(no E)
            Amp Builds: Tweed Princeton (5F2-A) variation, 2 BF Princeton Reverb clones, & Super Reverb clone
            Sometimes use a Blues Jr., Tech 21 Trademark 10 & Power Engine 60
            SPG modded DS-1, TS-7 & CryBaby; Visual Sounds Rte. 66 & H2O; Guyatone Tremolo
            SD pickups: SSL-2, APS-2, tapped Quarter Pound, Custom 5 & Antiquity humbuckers

            "Conan! What are the best things in life?"
            "Girls, guitars, guns and cars!"

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

              as for the laminated tops
              there is no bracing issue in these guitars becasue they are typically built around a solid center block
              I have heard that the laminated tops were a little stronger and (if this makes sense) vibrated less and created less feedback
              Custom Guitar Builder - PM me if you're interested.
              Check out the new website and see the progress of felow forumites' guitars
              www.gaugeguitars.com
              Cheers!

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

                Originally posted by Blueline
                as for the laminated tops
                there is no bracing issue in these guitars becasue they are typically built around a solid center block
                I have heard that the laminated tops were a little stronger and (if this makes sense) vibrated less and created less feedback
                Actually, the feedback issue you brought up does kinda make sense now that I think about it.. it would be harder to start two pieces of wood (laminate top) vibrating that one piece.
                -Alex

                *Proud Owner and Player of Guage guitars, Warmoth guitars, and Orange amps*

                Originally posted by HamerPlyr
                I'm already wearing the costume, and Fredericks of Hollywood on the corset and also on the panties, which, of course, have the "convenience crotch".

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

                  i have a p-90 gibson es-135 and it cuts quit well. it has a very round bass sound but it also has crunchy highs wich p-90s are famous for. i love p-90s!
                  Down at the edge, close by a river.
                  Close to the edge, round by the corner.
                  Close to the end, down by the corner.
                  Down at the edge, round by the river.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Got quite a few Semi-Hollow / Hollow body ?'s

                    godin makes a p-90 hollowbody, i think its the lg, someone on here has one, and ive played 2-3 in shops. they are really good, but not owning one i wont review.....
                    Godin SDXT - 59-ClassicStack-JB
                    Martin D-15 - Fishman Neo-D
                    Boss BD-2 - MXR dynacomp - Dunlop Crybaby GCB-95 - Morley A/B/Y
                    Crate VC-3112
                    Brownsville NY J-Bass Copy
                    Fender Bassman 60

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X