I've been to Halo Guitars, Echopark and B.Hefner and PRS is doing nothing any different than I have seen.
Good work, yes....but nothing new or different.
Disagree. Just because it is not radical, it does not mean there are not significant differences. Paul is an innovator. You should look into PRS guitars more closely some time.I've been to Halo Guitars, Echopark and B.Hefner and PRS is doing nothing any different than I have seen.
Good work, yes....but nothing new or different.
Disagree. Just because it is not radical, it does not mean there are not significant differences. Paul is an innovator. You should look into PRS guitars more closely some time.
It’s all in the attention to details. Anyone can do it.
Off the top of my headI've played quite a few. The Artist Series is fairly common among studio musician's here, although the Music Man is replacing them rapidly.
Other than the legally required unique headstock design and the 25" scale, I really don't see any "innovation" from Paul. I think his firm builds a quality guitar, but against an Echopark??? There just isn't any comparison.
Neither company is really innovative, per-se, to the extent that they simply offer a different version of long existing design, and the manufacturing techniques (both shown and described) are identical.
The gentleman in the PRS video commented on his 200 employees. Echopark has less than 5.
To be totally honest, other than the Hollow Point system, Earvana, Lace Sensor, when was the last time you saw any real innovation in guitar building???
For example, I had B. Hefner build me a Les Paul neck with a Fender headstock which I put on a Stratocaster. Was this Innovation???? No. What about my set neck 24.75" Tele-esque guitars with a legally-required unique headstock design???? Nothing new!!!
A unique headstock, compound radius fretboards, an improvement on Leo Fender's vibrato design, select (high quality) woods and a fast-hard curing finish, while attractive attributes, I fail to see the innovation of which you speak.
Can you expound????




Very true. Both the rotary and the position of the traditional McCarty 3 way toggle are awkward. The single cuts have the switch in the right place though!I’m generally not a huge fan of the typical PRS control layout. Though I do like the McCarty 594.
McCarty 594 - 2018
I just wish it had a trem option.
Disagree. Just because it is not radical, it does not mean there are not significant differences. Paul is an innovator. You should look into PRS guitars more closely some time.
I get this and think we are essentially on the same page. I would just add that, generally speaking, a new improvement on an existing design can be patented, so from my perspective, I classify this as an innovation. It does not have to be all new to be an innovation.I also disagree, and I am not really a PRS fanboi: I've said before I have a soft spot, but that's only because I grew up in Maryland where they are made. No, Paul Smith has taken large-scale guitar building to a very different level (and TBH, I don't buy into the tiny builder = better product by default mindset. I played a couple Echo Park guitars (Ghetto Birds) and they were very nicely made but nothing that blew my skirt up, just well built versions of things we already know). The PRS neck design and join is actually pretty unique if you compare closely to other builders, but its not (in my mind) about innovation with PRS guitars, to me its about carefully considered evolution and improvement in materials, technique and design. I say all this while underscoring the fact that I have no real interest in buying another PRS and will probably be selling the one I do have in the near future, I just think we as players should acknowledge the fact that PRS has been successful precisely because he/they really do do thing differently than other builders.
Speaking of PRS necks, why does the neck have such a bulky heel at the body on some models?
I get this and think we are essentially on the same page. I would just add that, generally speaking, a new improvement on an existing design can be patented, so from my perspective, I classify this as an innovation. It does not have to be all new to be an innovation.
Now, what guitar ware you selling?
They seem bulky, but I have found that they "disappear: when you are actually playing them.