Scott_F said:I noticed this in a 24 fret PRS and a 22 fret PRS that I owned. I seem to not agree with Ed Roman on this one. (Never thought those words would come out of my mouth). I think 22 fret guitars sound better in the neck pup position.
http://www.edromanguitars.com/tech/22vs24.htm
Is that a joke?Scott_F said:I seem to not agree with Ed Roman on this one. (Never thought those words would come out of my mouth).
n00b said:Is that a joke?
Whew. I got scared for a second there.Scott_F said:yeah, should have put a smilie in there.
I've done it too...with different results. Were the pickups the same in the 22 and the 24 that you tried? "Deeper...richer...better" sounds like the difference between the D2 neck and the VB than the difference caused by the 1/2" difference in pickup position.Lewguitar said:To settle this argument all you really have to do is compare the tone of the neck pickup in a 22 fret PRS to the neck pickup in a 24 fret PRS. I did.
The neck pickup in the 22 fret guitar always sounds better to me.
Deeper...richer...better.
Lew
DeadSkinSlayer3 said:The harmonic placement argument is a complete load of bogus crap to me. It only applies on open strings and harmonics. If you fret a note, the harmonic spectrum changes, taking that node off of the neck pickup.
Lewguitar said:...
The neck pickup in the 22 fret guitar always sounds better to me.
Deeper...richer...better.
Lew
Brett Valentine said:While it's true that the rich overtone only really applies at the octave node, the principle is "sound (no pun intended). I think it's actually more about the distance from the bridge as the closer you get, the tone starts to brighten and thin out...
Brett