Battle Of The V's

Re: Battle Of The V's

Jackson's, especially the US ones, have the best playing necks I've played, like putting your fingers on a stick of butter, if that analogy makes any sense

Sent from my SM-G920P using Tapatalk

sadly, they are an RCH too wide for me.. Charvels are how I fly
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

Love em all!


IMG_20140524_154950485_HDR.jpg

What's the fingerboard radius on the Dean V? I'm looking at the Stealth V and maybe it has similar specs.
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

The original is the best....



Amen. 1958 V's are still at the top. Gorgeous design, love the string-thru. They straddle the line between classic and modern. I consider '67 V's to be the second best V. Between '58's and '67's, there's been some great players that have used them. That's good enough for me. I see no appeal in the asymmetrical V designs and/or with 6-in-a-row tuners, but for those that do, go for it.
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

Rhodes is best; for some reason the "shoulder" on Gibson style Vs annoys me on a visual level.

But these intrigue me:


The ones I played weighed about 15lbs, and sounded like you plugged your guitar into a stereo system. Terrible design.
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

I kinda dig the Dean V shape. I also like the gibson but I hate the pick guard. I think the V shape looks better with rear mounted pickups
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

my kit V which is the classic gibson v shape is cool. I think the skinnier metal V's would look funny on me and my fat body
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

Rhodes is best; for some reason the "shoulder" on Gibson style Vs annoys me on a visual level.

But these intrigue me:


I knew a guy who had one of the later run of these, 1982 i think, that had regular humbuckers, it was an awesome guitar. But the ones with the v shaped pickups sound terrible
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

I knew a guy who had one of the later run of these, 1982 i think, that had regular humbuckers, it was an awesome guitar. But the ones with the v shaped pickups sound terrible


That was the V2 monstrosity. Gibson put a lot of money into designing those V-shaped PU's. The guitar was a total flop. Gibson has a habit of pouring time, money, & resources into developing whimsical models that they will never get their money back on. Other examples are the Reverse V and the SG Zoot Suits. maybe if they spent their money smarter, they could charge less for their regular guitars. The cost of all these flops has to be covered by the models that actually do sell.
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

...But the ones with the v shaped pickups sound terrible

They sound divine to me, in the clips, I've never played one. Every classic guitar has been made with different pickups:
Strats with lace sensonrs, elite, HB's.
Teles with WHB, HB's, P90's.
Gibsons with HB's & P90's.
I'm willing to accept a Flying V with a single colish tone because it sounds great and aesthetically is close to the original.


As far as my favorite the '58 is the king for me, it was ahead of it's time and still (although a classic) looks like a modern guitar.
'67 is my second favorite, then the Jacksons RR & King V. I don't care for the name on the head, Hamers and the Japanese clones are all nice. Same for most of the Deans. I don't like those who change the shape like the Reverend, Carvin etc.
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

That's probably the best I've heard one of those sound. I'd imagine with a five pice maple/walnut laminated body and Norlin's poor QC there were alot of dead sounding ones. I did a little more searching on these. Made from 1979-1982 and 82 was the only year with regular humbuckers and at the time they were introduced they were the second most expensive guitar in Gibson's lineup at $1200
 
Re: Battle Of The V's

Just found one of these:
s-l1600.jpg
Tokai Traditional Series FV 53.
If it plays as nice as my other Tokais,it'll be a winner.
It should arrive Monday.

Cheers,PJ
 
Back
Top