eclecticsynergy
Well-known member
Sadly scarf joints became so associated with cheaper imports over time that some can't acknowledge it's a superior design.
Sadly scarf joints became so associated with cheaper imports over time that some can't acknowledge it's a superior design.
Now I'm curious what Greeny might have sold for, if the headstock and neck had not been repaired. I seem to recall it being listed on the Maverick Music website for 2 million USD. It was only on there a few weeks. I don't know if someone actually paid that or if Phil just took the listing down.
Now I'm curious what Greeny might have sold for, if the headstock and neck had not been repaired. I seem to recall it being listed on the Maverick Music website for 2 million USD. It was only on there a few weeks. I don't know if someone actually paid that or if Phil just took the listing down.
Have you ever built any lutes?
Scarf joints developed because they saved money on wood
I feel off a cliff with my Lester in a gig bag, landed on the guitar and the guitar came up smelling like roses.
Yeah, but the neck was broken and the bottle of rosewater in the outer pocket of the gig bag was smashed.
: D
Scarf joints haven't proven themselves superior. They are EQUAL TO, as six of one, half-dozen of the other.
Stop using the word BEST, because there isn't one - it's a fantasy. What exists in the real world is PREFERENCE.
Leo didn't use scarf joints because it was easier - saving production time.
Scarf joints developed because they saved money on wood, and they had plenty of production time.
I wasn't addressing anyone in particular. I was just..... pontificating as per normal.
Ha... So is there a neck joint that is standard practice that you would consider running away from upon site?
Yeah, I was expecting ICT to drop some deep knowledge on his issue with Scarf joints -or anybody really -other than the traditional opinion of disliking them because they are not traditional (Scarfs originally emerged in cheaper guitars If I'm not mistaken)... as from my experience, they are superior by most measure unless the time to make the neck is your measure for not a good method -which I don't factor that at all.
Leo Fender avoided all of this mess with an even cheaper and more innovative methodology of course -but with some small downsides too.
I'm open to being educated on Scarf joints by anyone with experience. -I don't have a strong opinion either way.
The tradition of oud making is at least as old, and the pegheads on most of them is about 80 degrees from the fingerboard. Obviously scarfed.