Since I already owned several different types of guitars when I started building, I’ve been relatively comfortable with a few types of necks and started building to experiment with things I normally hadn’t found in a store.
When I did my first Warmoth build, I got option paralysis. At that point, I wasn’t even sure what I really expected, or wanted.
That first build was a basic tele. So, I ended up choosing what I thought would fit the motif, and chose a 24.75 scale (personal preference), 1 11/16 nut width (because Warmoth mentioned it was pretty much “industry standard”) maple boatneck (V) with a pao ferro fretboard (for visual interest, over maple), satin nitro finish and standard 6150 frets. I like the neck and the guitar plays great, but I tend favor humbuckers, which leaves this one home unless I want that sound.
This helped start to narrow in my preference for the 1 11/16 nut width, 24.75 scale neck and satin nitro finish. These have carried on into the next two necks.
The next one was easier. I was going for a mahogany soloist body shreddy rock guitar. I knew I wanted a thinner neck profile, but not as thin as the wizard. This one got a 24.75 scale mahogany standard thin neck with an ebony fretboard and my first run at stainless steel 6150 frets. It’s fairly close to my Jackson Dinkys’ necks in feel, which has been kind of “home base” for me, as those were my first really good guitars and what I “grew up” playing.
The most recent build was intended to be more in between the first two, but still leaning toward the super Strat genre, but closer to the feel my recent purchases of Les Pauls. This one got a 24.75 scale maple on maple 59 round back neck, with stainless steel 6105 frets. For some reason, this feels a lot like home. I like the little extra meat it has.
The 6150 stainless frets and 59 round back shape will likely become my standards, too. I have been wanting to try the Wolfgang profile, though.
These experiments have brought me to help me form my preferences for my future builds, but like anything else my journey, is not yours.