MetalManiac
Li'l Junior Member
Fender to cash in on the DIY assembly Market
http://click.fender.com/r/LQVHCDW/978JA/FL2LG/CDL0L/7JZ9/SL/h
http://click.fender.com/r/LQVHCDW/978JA/FL2LG/CDL0L/7JZ9/SL/h
I don't think Warmoth has anything to worry about. They have much more in terms of other body and neck styles, scale lengths, headstock shapes, more wood choices, totally custom finishes, and not to mention, MUCH better pricing.
If anything Fender's entry into this market may help to keep other competitors' prices reasonable.
Hopefully they'll pass this idea down to Jackson so we can buy necks and bodies direct, even if they're foreign-made. I've got 2 USA Jacksons, 3 Custom Shop Jacksons, and 8 import Jackson mutts. I'd love to have those 8 mutts as CS models, but that's just not feasible.
The Warmoth kits I ordered arrived and impress me.
The thing most of you guys going on about Warmoth don't understand is that we on the forums are not normal everyday guitarists who know jack squat about swapping out pickups and necks and electronics and fret wire sizes and material.... To those people the name is everything. Fender and Gibson are the pinnacle of guitars for them and so on their first foray into the DIY world who do you think they're gonna choose? Expensive as hell Warmoth who can give them everything except what they really want (the logo) or Fender who do?
Clearly we aren't the target market. Brand snobs are.
Also... Do you realise how common maple is up in North America?? It's shocking that you guys would go the Warmoth or USACG route when you have materials to make your own in abundance.... Try getting good maple in Africa....![]()
/rant
I understand what you are saying about Fender or Gibson. The thing about Warmoth is they can give you everything you want, far beyond the scope of what Fender or Gibson could offer. I realize it's a big world to step into (the DIY) for beginners or people who do not have as much time to tinker with their instruments, but for those who do, the tonewoods, fret size & material, scale length, nut width, type of bridge, choice of pickups and quality of workmanship mean a lot more than a Fender or Gibson logo and play an important role in shaping the comfort and tone of the individual player.
Do you know how lucky you are to have access to woods like Wenge, Bubinga and Macassar Ebony in Africa? These are true prized tonewoods! Maple is ok, but I never use it at all for a neck. I actually can't stand it. I like Swamp Ash from North America and that's obviously only as a body wood.
Oh, and compared to Fender's prices, Warmoth is cheap! Some Maple necks go for as little as $200 from Warmoth, some Indian Rosewood necks go for as little as $280!!!! I'm sorry, but for my money, I want the quality over social status 10 times out of 10. I'm broke, I can't afford to make mistakes when purchasing a guitar, money is too hard to come by these days to ever consider a standard Fender neck for $500 over a very, very nice Warmoth neck for $300.
The thing most of you guys going on about Warmoth don't understand is that we on the forums are not normal everyday guitarists who know jack squat about swapping out pickups and necks and electronics and fret wire sizes and material.... To those people the name is everything. Fender and Gibson are the pinnacle of guitars for them and so on their first foray into the DIY world who do you think they're gonna choose? Expensive as hell Warmoth who can give them everything except what they really want (the logo) or Fender who do?
Clearly we aren't the target market. Brand snobs are.
Also... Do you realise how common maple is up in North America?? It's shocking that you guys would go the Warmoth or USACG route when you have materials to make your own in abundance.... Try getting good maple in Africa....![]()
/rant