Jump to content
Gibson Brands Forums

Dub-T-123

All Access
  • Posts

    10,174
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    35

Posts posted by Dub-T-123

  1. Atcq would be a fair choice imo 

     

    they’re not rock but that’s become a moot point to an extent. They took hip hop from “my name is _____ and I’ve got to say” to an actual art form. I am not a rap guy. I hate most modern rap music. Low End Theory and Midnight Marauders are absolute classic timeless albums 

  2. Here’s a link for the saws and files mentioned. You don’t need all the saws if you’re essentially just cutting a groove for your gauged files to follow later 

     

    I don’t have the saws but I have the files and they work great but I haven’t tried them on nylon. I gotta imagine they will work fine. A file cleaning brush is good to have handy as well. Your files will cut much faster when they aren’t clogged with material 

     

    People usually point out that stewmac is expensive and it is. There are less expensive options but these are the files I have and they work really well. I do the annual stewmax subscription and everything and I’m biased in their favor. 

     

    https://www.stewmac.com/luthier-tools-and-supplies/types-of-tools/saws/pull-stroke-gauged-saws/

     

    https://www.stewmac.com/luthier-tools-and-supplies/types-of-tools/files/nut-and-saddle-shaping-files-set-of-2/

     

    And if you really wanna go all out, this little guy looks really nice 

     

    https://www.stewmac.com/luthier-tools-and-supplies/types-of-tools/vises/nut-and-saddle-vise/

  3. I love Shane Gillis. For those who don’t know he was a writer at SNL and one of the actually funny ones like John Mulaney. He got fired because he made a racial joke about Asians which was considered distasteful.

     

    After being fired from SNL he became an absolute super star comedian, to the extent SNL invited him back as a guest to host the show 

     

    If you haven’t seen his stand up check him out I think it’s on Netflix. His special “Beautiful Dogs” is freakin hilarious 

  4. I think the nylon is hard but also slick so tools might tend to skate over it. With bone being a natural material, I imagine it has some microscopic structure that a file can bite into a bit easier 

     

    The saw I’m describing is like a thin version of a hacksaw blade 

     

    I got a pair of files from Stewmac that I think are advertised as nut/saddle shaping files which work really well but I haven’t tried them on nylon. The coarse side really hogs out material on bone 

     

    one thing is that you want the nut or saddle to be held very firmly in a vise that is connected to a heavy bench. If the piece can move or vibrate you lose a lot of the energy you put in with hand tools 

     

    a belt sander would probably be super aggressive. Probably not a bad idea if you need to remove a lot of material in a hurry, but it might cause the nylon to melt a bit and it wouldn’t be an ideal choice for refined shaping

  5. The coach house is cool but you’re either a cover band or a near-death senior citizen if you’re playing there 

     

    My dad took me there to see Asia when I was a little kid lol. I knew nothing about Steve Howe or why my dad liked that cheesy band at the time
     

    I did get to see **** Dale there and in between stories of his colostomy bag etc the boy threw down an incredible performance 

  6. The best answer is going to be to play them and decide yourself 

     

    I got a 59 reissue in 2020 and I don’t really know how to describe the pickups but they sound freakin good and the neck is not what I would call fat.


    I have played some reissue LPs with just humongous necks. Most of the 59 reissues now come with a neck profile which was laser scanned from an original 59 called “Carmelita”. This is not a fat neck, it’s not quite 60s C either. It has a little more depth to it than the 60s profile, but it doesn’t have any bulky “shoulders” to it so it really doesn’t feel big in the hand 

     

    I think the neck is outstandingly comfortable and I prefer it to the typical 60s style which I find slightly wide and thin feeling for my hand. The wide thin combo makes my thumb cramp up on the back of the neck 

     

    The pickups just sound like a Les Paul to me. It sounds really sweet clean, in the middle position you can actually get a bit of quack going. Through a dirty amp it just sings. Very throaty when you roll the tone back a bit, very rude when you roll the bridge pickup wide open. Neck pickup sings. It’s a perfect guitar. No idea about the Supreme to be honest and I don’t know anyone here who has one

  7. I’ve been really into dissecting/collecting/building/designing pedals for a long time now but my interest has fallen off in the last couple years. There was a long time when I was building stuff every day 

     

    Pedal builders are notoriously deceptive. They want consumers to think they did so much R&D leading up to a massive ground breaking discovery of a magic circuit or component which gives you TONE.

     

    The truth is that an OD or fuzz pedal is very rudimentary technology and does not require extensive knowledge to understand. This is compounded by the fact that we see the exact same circuits over and over and over again. You learn one circuit and you know how like 1,000 overdrive pedals work. It’s like learning chords on a guitar. You can learn 3 chords and play thousands of songs 

     

    When you buy electronic components like an op amp for example, the manufacturer has a datasheet detailing all of the specs of this component and recommending several different ways to use it. They will have schematics that you can just copy and adjust/augment to your needs and this is essentially the basis of how electronics are designed. The rangemaster and Fuzz Face came from an old Mullard handbook. I guess what I’m saying is the real high IQ research work is done by some geniuses in a lab before the components reach the consumers. Were just a bunch of apes huffing solder fumes 

    • Like 1
  8. P Dawg. I was sorta careful to not inject any of my personal opinions into my post and just mentioned a couple things which I understand to be factual. Your reply gives me the feeling that you interpreted my post as bashing Taylor which is not my intention. I probably left a bit too much unsaid since I don’t want to be too wordy 

     

    In no way did I suggest that the cheapest and most expensive version of a given Taylor model sound exactly the same. I said they use the exact same CNC milled bracing which is a fact. I obviously understand that using a different wood for the top etc will result in sonic differences and no two pieces of wood are completely identical. 
     

    Again the point remains true that you get the exact same guitar with different materials and aesthetics at any price range 

     

    I made no comparison to Gibson or any other mass manufacturer 

     

    You either missed the point or are incorrect about the bracing. Loading a piece of wood into the CNC is not the same as what I described. I didn’t describe the whole process because I’m not a traditional luthier and I’m not trying to teach you how to be one. Hand carved bracing by a master luthier is objectively superior to mass produced CNC milled bracing in all ways except efficiency and profitability. 
     

    A traditional luthier is going to progressively carve away at the bracing until he has the least amount of material possible which still offers the necessary amount of reinforcement. This produces a more resonant sound board. A CNC machine is going to invariably make every single piece a bit heavier than it needs to be to account for variables in materials 

     

    Hopefully we can understand these facts without implying that Taylor guitars are “bad” or sound bad. Of course I realize the vast majority of Gibson and Martin parts are machine made. However Gibson and Martin have custom shops, where when you spend big money, you get a whole different level of craftsmanship. With Taylor you spend big money and you get the same guitar pumped out of the same machines with special materials and aesthetics 

    • Like 2
  9. 5 hours ago, PrairieDog said:

    Chuckle, yeah they understand, well to a point. Apparently Taylor is a bit of a target for some, although there are other folks who try to be politic, chuckle.  (We have several) 

    As a fairly new member here too, the only time I really stepped in it was when I did a NGD for a beautiful, top of the line, used Taylor 12-fret we picked up.  (Folks here know I am in the middle of a bad case of GAS trying to make up for the lost past 50 years, so NGDs seem to be a monthly occurrence for me 🙄)

    Anyway, I  thought I would at least be humored on this one, because I included a pic of my Gibson DIF next to it as a “posting tax.”  I joked the music room was getting a bit “glittery.”  

    So I watched as 38 people stopped by the post over the day and got nothing.  Not a single like,  no tepid “nice” comment,  not even ribbing from the usual suspects about it being a Taylor😆  I assessed I crossed a line and sheepishly took the post down  😅

    But seriously, everybody understands folks have different gear.  The mods really only care about folks riling up trouble/breaking the posting rules, and even then it takes a lot.  

    Welcome and have fun!

    Taylor is an easy target for people who appreciate traditional luthiery because all of their parts are CNC milled throughout their entire price range. Whether you get their cheapest or most expensive version of a particular model you get the same CNC milled bracing etc 
     

    Traditionally when making bracing for an acoustic you split the piece of wood with an axe so that it breaks along the grain. You then take those pieces and mill them in a way which maximizes the quartesawn orientation and minimizes grain runoff. Essentially you end up with the smallest lightest piece of wood which maximizes strength and straightness for its given application 

     

    Taylor does everything by CNC on even their most high end instruments, so you really never get the benefit of traditional luthiery no matter how much you spend 

     

    With Taylor you get the same guitar at all price ranges. You are just paying for a different type of wood that they inserted into a machine or inlays which are done by a machine or other aesthetic modifications 

     

    It doesn’t sound like a big deal but for their high end stuff they are charging an amount of money that you could easily spend elsewhere and get a superior instrument

  10. Any positive comments appreciated. lol

     

    That is such a perfect sentence for this industry. When everyone is just copying the same two circuits over and over again it really is mostly the positive affirmation that we’re seeking
     

    Lovepedal is sorta unique in that they love to clone the Electra Distortion while everyone else does Tube Screamers. If you like the Electra Distortion then Lovepedal has a variety of flavors for you. 
     

    The Zen Drive is obviously a licensed clone of the Hermida which is actually a good pedal. Hermida was using MOSFETs as clipping diodes like the OCD.
     

    The Purple Plexi is one of those LM386 based things. The pinnacle of collectibility in this particular flavor of drive would be the D*A*M Sonic Titan. The LM386 just doesn’t break up the way a tube amp does. It’s fun and convincing for a few minutes but it always sounds like a pedal. It doesn’t sound like an amp. I would never ever recommend spending any big money on a LM386 based object. It is a very cheesy low hanging fruit type option for designers

  11. I see Bonamassa’s guitar playing sorta the same way I see an autistic person learn to socialize. He paid very close attention to the style of BB, Albert King, Eric Johnson, etc and he mimics them perfectly. 
     

    except the listener is usually aware of the mimicry and something feels strangely disingenuous about his music. I wish to some day be as great a player and as influential as Bonamassa, but I have no desire to actually listen to his music. 
     

    I had the pleasure of chatting with Joe at the guitar show they hold at the OC fair grounds. I’m not sure if Joe still goes every year but he was very friendly and welcoming when I met him. He’s really just passionate about guitars and he knows so much about playing guitar and the history and everything. I’d love to hang out with him, get guitar lessons from him etc, but I don’t actually listen to his music at all

  12. 5 hours ago, Knightrider7 said:

    A thin piece of rubber tubing placed underneath the stop bar works for me, just compress it with your fingers and place it underneath the stop bar, anything that holds it in place will do.

    This will also melt the finish on a Gibson if left in place for a bit of time 


    The nitro and rubber won’t react instantly, but I still wouldn’t recommend this method. 

  13. That is a well known and intentional feature of the Tube Screamer. As you add more distortion you will typically want to reduce the amount of low end or things get too flubby and loose. 
     

    Think of it this way.. the Tube Screamer is not really meant to CUT low end in practice. It is supposed to increase the higher frequencies at a disproportionate level. A loud distorted amp is going to sound farty if you slam it with a bunch of low end. If you slam it with higher frequencies, you get the distortion where you want it but keep the low end at a level your amp can still manage 

     

    Personally I’m not a huge fan of the TS or most of its countless derivatives but huge bass is rarely desired in distortion or overdrive 

    • Thanks 1
    • Upvote 1
  14. I don’t have a pic handy but one of the coolest pedals that I’ve gotten in the past few years is the DOD Rubberneck Delay.

     

    The name is kinda silly and it costs $349 now but when I got it DOD was blowing out their stock and I want to say it was like $150 or something.

     

    This pedal is such a sleeper.. I’ve never heard anybody really talk about it but it’s amazing. It’s a true BBD analog delay but they stacked several chips so you get really long max delay time for an analog delay. 
     

    it has tap tempo with subdivisions, a tone control which affects just the echoes (AMAZING simple feature), stereo outs, and it has an effects loop. So I like to run a micropog in the loop and you get these magic wand sounds where each repeat goes another octave up to infinity. 
     

    I LOVE that pedal and highly highly recommend it to anyone. The modulation is awesome and all the features just work effortlessly. It sounds fantastic 

    • Upvote 2
  15. 16 hours ago, Phil OKeefe said:

     

    I won't be posting a picture of that one, or of my Boss Box 40 set - both are boxed up and in storage ATM, but I do happen to have a few of my other Boss pedals sitting out, so here's a shot of some of those. Most of these are newer pedals (circa 1990s to 2020), but the CE-2 is from 1980, the PH-1r is from 1983, and the BF-2 is from 1981. The SG-1 is the fourth one I've owned over the years; I got my first one the same year as this one is from - 1980. At the time, it seemed like I was the only one who used one; you never saw them on anyone else's board. This one is darned near flawless... and yes, I have the box. 😉 

     

    image.thumb.png.eeb416d62e114d935a5b552e0808db98.png

     

    I currently have three pedalboards, one of which has a Carl Martin switcher on it and a bunch of mini pedals that I use for live use when I don't feel like taking the two main boards. This is my main "dirt" board. 

    image.thumb.jpeg.9a31e513f64216f38ab4ac85aa4efec7.jpeg

     

    And this is my main modulation and delay board. 

    image.thumb.jpeg.16f51fc018c02fa43e9db548d9a1459a.jpeg

     

    I have a bunch of other pedals that are not on any of the three boards. Mainly, they're all in their original boxes in a closet, and I take them out whenever I need them for various projects. I also have all of the current generation Maestro pedals. I don't have any pics with all of them together, but here's a shot of several of them in use with my two Boogies. 

    image.thumb.png.a692e76674a9699b906ba9047cac79d2.png

     

     

    AKG C414 and Beyerdynamic M160?

  16. 6 hours ago, Sheepdog1969 said:

    I love the finish on this box, and if you hadn't mentioned that the clear coat inadvertently created this effect by reacting with the color layer, I would have been asking how you did that!! 

    That’s a hammer tone finish. You can get it in aerosol cans or brush it on. He was talking about the Pep Box finish though

    • Upvote 1
×
×
  • Create New...