Re: Les Paul Models?
I hooked up a chambered one and a normal one to an oscilloscope and the normal one had a stronger signal.
Jk
When I heard Gibson Swiss cheesed the bodies I couldn't believe it. It came to be because of complaints from rock stars who lug them around for 2+ hours every night I'm sure.
The theory is as you know more mass more resonance and sustain. My heaviest guitars have that neck vibration someone else mentioned in this thread. Normal Les Pauls start out very heavy. Punching out a little bit of weight may provide still plenty of resonance and sustain but theoretically and practically not as much as a normal body. For me it's the practice that is shocking rather than the sound and feel differences.
I didn't watch the video. I think a better comparison would be unplugged and perhaps with an oscilloscope.
How are chambered bodies a blasphemy? Explain yourself. I hope you are not another one of these cork-sniffers. I guess that's why B.B. King sounded so awful on his semi-hollow bodied ES-335 (sarcasm there).
;>)/
I hooked up a chambered one and a normal one to an oscilloscope and the normal one had a stronger signal.
Jk
When I heard Gibson Swiss cheesed the bodies I couldn't believe it. It came to be because of complaints from rock stars who lug them around for 2+ hours every night I'm sure.
The theory is as you know more mass more resonance and sustain. My heaviest guitars have that neck vibration someone else mentioned in this thread. Normal Les Pauls start out very heavy. Punching out a little bit of weight may provide still plenty of resonance and sustain but theoretically and practically not as much as a normal body. For me it's the practice that is shocking rather than the sound and feel differences.
I didn't watch the video. I think a better comparison would be unplugged and perhaps with an oscilloscope.