Yes.
No.
You decide.
We gonna be here all day waiting for me to do an impact study....
Yes.
No.
You decide.
Huh ???@Mitch Pearrow SJMP got you some speakers, Man...
I am sorry but I have no dough12", 16Ω like you was looking for....
my poop chute is an exit only.
And that there is funny, I dont care who y'are!!If you have an explosive diarrhea, it a poop shoot!
I cant watch the Adrian Smith thing now, but I will later at home.
My guess would be exposure to rapid temp change would affect neck relief tension first.
Did the sun make your tuning go sharp @Robert Herndon ?
I recall watching vid of Samantha Fish outdoor gig where it was a bit cold out; between songs while tuning she mentioned the cold was playing hell with her tuning.
I dont recall the guitar.
I would also guess solid / rock maple / Fender necks might be more resistant to this.
But then again, I know exactly squat.
And that there is funny, I dont care who y'are!!
And the title of this thread immediately brought to mind the Langston Hughes poem Harlem.
Harlem
BY LANGSTON HUGHES
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?

VERY!!
All of my Gibson’s go sharp in cooler temps, and they go flat in the warmer days of summer, even if stored in their cases, all of my strats stay pretty much where they belong but as jtcnj says sometimes they need to be reset after a couple of days sitting in the rack stand, but stable after tuning!Put Snark tuner on any one of my Paul's. Pick them up out of the case by the neck and watch the tuner - they all go slightly flat.
Put tuners on both necks of the double neck. Lift it out of the case by either neck, or by both - no change at all.
The neck joints look good on all the Paul's. The Lemonburst and the Black Custom are finished in poly and no cracking is visible around the joints, but the necks seem very usable- and it's most prevelant on my real Gibson Les Paul.
I get the opposite of that seasonally, adjusted for with truss rod, as opposed to day to day tuning fluctuations.All of my Gibson’s go sharp in cooler temps, and they go flat in the warmer days of summer, even if stored in their cases, all of my strats stay pretty much where they belong but as jtcnj says sometimes they need to be reset after a couple of days sitting in the rack stand, but stable after tuning!
Cheers
All of my Gibson’s go sharp in cooler temps, and they go flat in the warmer days of summer, even if stored in their cases, all of my strats stay pretty much where they belong but as jtcnj says sometimes they need to be reset after a couple of days sitting in the rack stand, but stable after tuning!
Cheers
VERY!!
I find my sloppy play and stepping on a RAT hide it pretty well.
Kidding, well half kidding.
I can really hear when my G or B strings pull flat after some very bendy things. Usually this does not happen.
When I first plug in / warm up I play some barre chord runs, then do a run of bends from hi e to lo e then back up again, then tune.
It seems to settle everything in first.
Re tune then my guitars mostly stay in tune.
this has nothing to do with environment changes during my practice time, but if I tune first after taking a guitar from rack or stand that has been sitting overnight, it will be off when I check it again after I've been playing a bit.
I can tell if it is more or less humid than my last session - I run a dehumidifier in the basement / play space in warm months, but there is still noticeable range - predictable that my tuning will be a little flat or sharp when first picked up of the rack or stand.
Ya i never hear any out of tune warble even under high gain on your playin Robert.