It is just sitting around. My pleasure.Dude-- thanks-- you dont have to send me yours -- I was just curious for a recommendation--- the AMazon.com ones I bought months back SUCKED
MUCH appreciated Ray!!
Of course I will do a FOOLS report on how they work-- and hopefully how they SAVE MY GEAR from getting TRASHED.
the "Marshall incident" involved the large black dog.......he was tangled in the cord (didnt notice) -- UPS man knocked on the door-- DOg attacks door--- snatches cord from guitar input jack (I am holding the guitar---amp side of the cord doesnt give--- marshall gets FLUNG across the floor lodges in the edge of the door and thats when the cord snatched-- destroying the input jack
Thankfully Drumoid was able to fix her up![]()
poor kitty------
That strat is not going anywhere. And it still has the expensive pups in it. I got them from a guy who pulled them from a guitar before they became a super hot commodity for $200. I already sold another pair I had. They sold overnight for $ 450. There is also a set in this guitar, which came stockIs that green Strat just sitting around too? Ray


Your theory is valid, and $700-$1,100 is a value zone. However, it is not just the pleasure of modding, or a moderate cost savings that you get. The process taught me to care for all the guitars I own inside and out, and allowed me to customize them in almost any way possibleRVA certainly does a wonderful job with his guitars, and this piece of Squire crap -- probably plays and sounds great. Having said that, I went through the process of spending many hundreds of $ on an Epi 310 and came to the conclusion that I could never make it as good as a $700 (that's what I paid new for it) Gibson SG faded or even the $450 PRS junior. Enjoying the modding is where the value lies, imho - it's a waste of time spending the money on a lower priced guitar for the sake of making that guitar as good as a higher priced guitar (just buy the higher priced guitar; manufacturers have better scales to make this work than you do...). I had a Harley Benton LP and while it looked nice, no amount of money would have made it a good guitar, imho.
I now await the:
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Hence the reason I own so many guutars!Funny -- Ray and I had been discussing the same this morning ---
I found this:
New 8 Colors School Band Right Handed Electric Guitar w/Bag & Accessories | eBay
58.00 Stratocrapster --- and was lamenting the fact I had some bids and bobs around I COULD get it and "hot rod it" and MAKE it playable and AWESOME---
BUT I too have done this -- MANY times over (many) and while often times I do clear a NICE little profit--- its like "been there --done that" -- ugh -- do I REALLY want to put the effort and time and fret dressing and fiddling about -- to make it play good -- to get MAYBE 40-50.00 profit---seems like
YEah -- Ive dont that -learned that-- gained that skill-- I CAN do it , but --- naw----
TO ad to what Ray said--- the process of CONVERTING trash to treasure over the years HAS taught me many valuable-- useful skills-- learning, and knowledge-- and the fact I gained it -- at a PROFIT not a loss -- is a PLUS!![]()
you have to SELL them after you FIX them RayHence the reason I own so many guutars!
Hence the reason I own so many guutars!
I used to only have my Rosewood board Black Strat I fixed the T Rod on. Now I have 2. One with maple board. Oh and a Epi LP, 4 SG's ... As I see it, I had enough at the 1st Strat. Now I have at least 13 axes total. 10 too many when you figure my skill level into the equation.