Hey guys,
I'm new here and I was planning to upgrade my PRS tremonti SE stock pickup and while I was looking through here and there, guess what?, I found this from http://randy-rhoads.com/rr/articles/art15.htm.
Jackson "Custom" By Charvel
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You know if Marilyn Monroe played electric guitar it would be a Charvel. Grover Jackson makes the sexiest, sleekest guitars around. Let's hear it for the good ole' U.S.of A. We believe that Grover makes the fastest neck in the West. The Jackson Custom comes stock with a 22-fret maple neck through the body with wings of poplar wood. The fingerboard is Grover's classic ebony slab-board, which means it is thicker than normal, and I don't care what anybody says, this thick fingerboard changes the tone of the instrument. It adds more "ping," high end, brilliance and tonal response that keeps going up and out. Along with slab-boards Grover also makes his necks 1 & 11/16" wide at the nut and makes the dimension of the back of the neck in either flat, normal or dumpy (like Allen Holdsworth's). The strings go through the body behind the bridge and fan out a bit at the headstock Now the headstock design was designed by Grover and the body and fingerboard inlays were designed by Randy Rhoads. Randy thought his original Jackson prototype looked too much like a Flying V so he had Grover take the body to the bandsaw and streamline it. The end result came out a little like the rear fins on a 1959 Cadillac. This neck-through-the-body idea really does add sustain and power to a guitar; the next step above this, of course, will be when a luthier has the guts to build an ebony neck through the body (heaven forbid!). Every Jackson Custom comes stock with a Seymour Duncan Jazz Humbucking in the neck position and a Duncan distortion in the bridge position. The hardware is all brass. The finishes offered are either black or white. The back of the neck and headstock come painted as well and binding around the neck and headstock are standard. The controls are, from front to back: volume, three-way toggle-switch, volume and a tone. It seems that this collaboration between Grover Jackson and Randy Rhoads is really being picked upon heavily by the "metal monsters." I think Grover has created a monster - look out. The suggested retail price for the Jackson Custom is $1,500. Contact: Charvel Manufacturing, P.O. Box 245, San Dimas, CA. 91773, (714) 599-9207. In New York: Sam Ash, 160 W. 48th St., N.Y., N.Y 10036, (212) 245-4778-9. --Bob Davis
Grover took Randy's advice and streamlined the basic configuration of a V. Now it looks like the fin of a 159 Caddy.
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Btw, is JB Sh4 a icecity on clean channel? Coz I heard some people just can't stand it? And I was planning to get either Sh4 or Sh6.
Any recommendation are welcome!
Thx
Jeff
I'm new here and I was planning to upgrade my PRS tremonti SE stock pickup and while I was looking through here and there, guess what?, I found this from http://randy-rhoads.com/rr/articles/art15.htm.
Jackson "Custom" By Charvel
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
You know if Marilyn Monroe played electric guitar it would be a Charvel. Grover Jackson makes the sexiest, sleekest guitars around. Let's hear it for the good ole' U.S.of A. We believe that Grover makes the fastest neck in the West. The Jackson Custom comes stock with a 22-fret maple neck through the body with wings of poplar wood. The fingerboard is Grover's classic ebony slab-board, which means it is thicker than normal, and I don't care what anybody says, this thick fingerboard changes the tone of the instrument. It adds more "ping," high end, brilliance and tonal response that keeps going up and out. Along with slab-boards Grover also makes his necks 1 & 11/16" wide at the nut and makes the dimension of the back of the neck in either flat, normal or dumpy (like Allen Holdsworth's). The strings go through the body behind the bridge and fan out a bit at the headstock Now the headstock design was designed by Grover and the body and fingerboard inlays were designed by Randy Rhoads. Randy thought his original Jackson prototype looked too much like a Flying V so he had Grover take the body to the bandsaw and streamline it. The end result came out a little like the rear fins on a 1959 Cadillac. This neck-through-the-body idea really does add sustain and power to a guitar; the next step above this, of course, will be when a luthier has the guts to build an ebony neck through the body (heaven forbid!). Every Jackson Custom comes stock with a Seymour Duncan Jazz Humbucking in the neck position and a Duncan distortion in the bridge position. The hardware is all brass. The finishes offered are either black or white. The back of the neck and headstock come painted as well and binding around the neck and headstock are standard. The controls are, from front to back: volume, three-way toggle-switch, volume and a tone. It seems that this collaboration between Grover Jackson and Randy Rhoads is really being picked upon heavily by the "metal monsters." I think Grover has created a monster - look out. The suggested retail price for the Jackson Custom is $1,500. Contact: Charvel Manufacturing, P.O. Box 245, San Dimas, CA. 91773, (714) 599-9207. In New York: Sam Ash, 160 W. 48th St., N.Y., N.Y 10036, (212) 245-4778-9. --Bob Davis
Grover took Randy's advice and streamlined the basic configuration of a V. Now it looks like the fin of a 159 Caddy.
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Btw, is JB Sh4 a icecity on clean channel? Coz I heard some people just can't stand it? And I was planning to get either Sh4 or Sh6.
Any recommendation are welcome!
Thx
Jeff