If you want an oil finish on a Warmoth neck, without losing their warranty get one of their baked maple necks. They will warranty them with no finish so, you can choose to put the oil on or not with no downside.
I do have a set of those calipers
I looked and compared the measurements from said candy apple squire
And the dimensions listed on the Carvin site for their necks
And if I remember correctly the Carvin necks were closer to the wizard neck than the Fender
I do like the thinner neck
How does the.wolfgang neck compare
I'm sure someone finds it more comfortable for.some reason or other
I'm leaning wizard at the.moment
But the standard size would be less expensive
Hmmm
*(Sent from my durned phone!)*
Which reminds me... I do have that Wizard neck, still, AND the Earvana nut that came on it, and I have no use for it.I actually replaced a Warmoth Wizard neck on my Line6 Variax with a Warmoth Wolfgang neck. The Wizard felt pretty accurate to the Ibanez Wizard II profile that most of their guitars have. However, I don't like that profile much, either. Way too thin for me.
The Wolfgang profile is a tad chunkier than a standard Fender modern C shape, but the asymmetrical shape makes it feel so nice in the hand. It's very much like my Peavey Wolfgang neck.
Which reminds me... I do have that Wizard neck, still, AND the Earvana nut that came on it, and I have no use for it.
The new Fender/EVH Wolfgang is a somewhat thinner C shape, not the older asymmetrical shape.I have to get my hands on a wolfgang neck
and see what that is
I do remember trying one of the $400 wolfgangs a few months ago and thinking how nice the neck felt
would that be the same neck shape?
For what you'll spend on a nice replacement neck, you could sell the Squier and upgrade to a Mexican fender.
For what you'll spend on a nice replacement neck, you could sell the Squier and upgrade to a Mexican fender.