gball
Ambassador of Boogie
@gball Let me throw this out there and I'd like your opinion...
I know a guitar tech that is traveling professionally and is currently working for some huge names.
I've seen his work firsthand and it's impressive.
I paid him to do some work on one of my guitars - top dollar - over 3 times the going rate in this area. I considered the amount a "tuituon" from which I could learn more.
The work performed on my guitar was on par with what I've seen come from our local Guitar Sinner.
Even guys with phenomenal skills won't always give the "little guy" the same service a performing artist attached to a label will receive.
My background working with Dad in aviation taught me that we performed all work to a very high standard, even on the neighbor's farm truck.
FWIW...
All I can say on that front is that my experience with "guitar techs" is what led me to learn to work on my own guitars. Too much is subjective and open to interpretation and in the end those guys will likely always default to some amalgam of their own experience with a variety of people. I have never, not once, gotten a guitar back from a tech and been happy with it. So, I bought some tools and figured it out. Electric guitars are, in the bigger picture, simple things and not so hard to figure out if you take the time and do it right.
I have friends that tour with dedicated techs. Those guys work on their guitars day-in, day-out and know exactly what they want and how they want it. Short of that, I doubt someone could ever get a guitar perfect for someone else.




