jmh151
Active member
Re: inside the PRS SC245 and SC250...
I agree that Historic Les Pauls don't sound like the real vintage Les Pauls. That's why I haven't bought one, and I've been in contact with luthiers to build me a vintage style Les Paul. Since the price quotes tend to be over $10,000, I stick with my 1986 Les Paul Custom.
Who cares if it's South American or Honduras mahogany? Honduras is what the original Les Pauls were made of.
Again, my problem is PRS is promoting the 245 as being a Vintage Les Paul Tone- so I expet it to have all the ingredients of a vintage les Paul. The 250 is a whole different animal, and my statements don't apply to the 250. I also don't expect to nail a Les Paul tone with a Carvin which is a 25" scale either, in addition to dual action truss rod and graphite rods...
Am I sure I'm getting a solid hondurans mahogany guitar from Carvin? Can't be sure about anything, but that is what they advertise, and I presume they woudn't want to be exposed as misleading customers.
Carvin isn't the huge company that you think. Years ago PRS tried to get a good supply of Ebony and Koa for their guitars, and PRS acknowledged that Carvin had a stockpile built up over the years that PRS couldn't compete with, and did not understand how Carvin could offer it for so cheap.
Again, I'm not saying one guitar sounds better than the other,- that's a subjective decision. I would just rather have a solid body electric- maybe made of Limba, than something that needs weight relief or sound chambers.
I agree that Historic Les Pauls don't sound like the real vintage Les Pauls. That's why I haven't bought one, and I've been in contact with luthiers to build me a vintage style Les Paul. Since the price quotes tend to be over $10,000, I stick with my 1986 Les Paul Custom.
Who cares if it's South American or Honduras mahogany? Honduras is what the original Les Pauls were made of.
Again, my problem is PRS is promoting the 245 as being a Vintage Les Paul Tone- so I expet it to have all the ingredients of a vintage les Paul. The 250 is a whole different animal, and my statements don't apply to the 250. I also don't expect to nail a Les Paul tone with a Carvin which is a 25" scale either, in addition to dual action truss rod and graphite rods...
Am I sure I'm getting a solid hondurans mahogany guitar from Carvin? Can't be sure about anything, but that is what they advertise, and I presume they woudn't want to be exposed as misleading customers.
Carvin isn't the huge company that you think. Years ago PRS tried to get a good supply of Ebony and Koa for their guitars, and PRS acknowledged that Carvin had a stockpile built up over the years that PRS couldn't compete with, and did not understand how Carvin could offer it for so cheap.
Again, I'm not saying one guitar sounds better than the other,- that's a subjective decision. I would just rather have a solid body electric- maybe made of Limba, than something that needs weight relief or sound chambers.