




For whittling, the classic choice is something with small, maneuverable blades in a couple of different profiles for different tasks:
Although when I was a kid, I got by with a single blade no problem, and the last time I whittled it was with a classic Opinel:
Either of these would work on a Jackson (watch out for chipping the Opinel's thin edge) but would probably take quite a while to make any progress. For roughout you're probably best off starting with something larger and tougher. Kitchen knives are too fragile, a machete probably too unweildy. A survival-type knife would be best:
But honestly whittling isn't the best choice for something like a Jackson. If you really want to do the job right, you need something like this:
Or even the old standby:
Really entirely up to you how you want to handle it. After you're done with the Jackson, if you find yourself wanting to play a guitar, Schecter, LTD, and Ibanez make some solid instruments.

I've played some decent JS's...some need a bit of work to get them playing right though. I'd get the RR only cuz I want one (a pointy V) & don't have one :bigthumb:
Where are the JS's made? I would have thought somewhere where they make Squiers as well? And Squiers seem to be solid. At least the Classic Vibes. Anything below, yeah, they're kinda garbage.The Jackson JS series are pretty much garbage, and I wouldn't buy an X series without playing it first.
Where are the JS's made? I would have thought somewhere where they make Squiers as well? And Squiers seem to be solid. At least the Classic Vibes. Anything below, yeah, they're kinda garbage.
I have a Dinky and was playing quite a while last night and often use it for gigs.
The SLX SHOULD be a step up, but the ones I have played have been hit/miss on price-performance. Some are greta other have been not so much. I'd go there, but be prepared to return.
I would agree with this.
To OP...
I recently went through a buy/return cycle with three Jacksons. A JS and two SLX models.
The JS trem posts were installed wrong (one at an angle) so it had bad return to zero. But it had a great neck. Both of the SLX had neck problems. Serious neck problems.
And also they are made of Poplar which is... really lacking bass response, imo and felt insubstantial. Very light weight guitars, like 5lbs.
I am sure older jacksons are great, but I'm unimpressed with what they are building these days.
Honestly if you are set on one of the Jacksons, I would just get a JS and save some money. The Jackson trem is just a branded FRS. If you get a JS with a good neck and properly installed trem, it will be a great guitar.. if you can live with a 5 pound guitar that feels a bit like a toy.