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Yorgle

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Posts posted by Yorgle

  1. Has anyone here pulled the trigger on a new Uptown Kat?  If so, what are your thoughts on it?   I'm not overly fond of the solid colors, but he lightness of an ES version (compared to the heaviness of my Wildkat) really tempts me.  Had Epiphone included a vintage sunburst or other natural wood finish I'd definitely be moving uptown.

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  2. Ideally, string height (action) should take into account your playing style- if you're a heavy strummin' rhythm sort of guy, or a finger-picker, then you want the action on the high side.  If you're into note-by-note melodies halfway up the fingerboard and beyond, lower action is better.  Don't be afraid to adjust the bridge height yourself- you can't really break anything.  If you want a good starting point, put a capo on the first fret and raise/lower the bridge until you get 4/64ths inch (about the thickness of  a quarter) at the 12th fret for the treble E string, and 5/64ths (just a wee-bit thicker than a quarter) for the low E (measuring from the top of the 12th fret to the bottom of each string).  If anything buzzes at those settings, then  take it to a luthier.  99% of guitars should be able to handle those settings without buzzing.  

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  3. I absolutely LOVE my Wildkat!   It’s the perfect size for couch playing into the wee hours and sounds good even unplugged.  $350 is a good price-if it’s in good shape, buy it.   You won’t regret it.  If the seller has a case for it, get that as well because it’s specific to these guitars (335 style cases are too big, Les Paul cases are too small).  

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  4. Try plucking the string and while it’s buzzing, touch various parts of the instrument.  Loose parts can often sound just like fret buzz.  The open D on my 2015 Wildkat used to buzz something fierce.  Tightening the bridge pickup screws 1/8 turn fixed it.  

  5. 43 minutes ago, RobinTheHood said:

    They came in vintage sunburst and heritage cherry burst. The colors may vary from guitar to guitar, but it sounds like you want the vintage sunburst model.

    Thank you.  That should help me narrow my search.  It seems there are lots of the cherry bursts out there, but to me they look way too clownish.  

  6. I've seen some Alleykats advertised as "sunbursts" and others as "cherry sunbursts" and it looks to me that the former are a darker, browner red than the latter.  Are they, in fact, two different colors or is it just the way they look in photographs.  The thing is, I'm about 90% of the way toward pulling the trigger on buying an Alleykat, but I really don't care for the clownburst look.  I love the tobacco bursts, but they are all but non-existent in these parts, but I think I could live with the darker red-brown ones I've seen in pictures.  

  7. When I changed the bridge on my Wildkat I increased the sting spacing slightly to accommodate my fat fingers.  That obviously caused some of the strings to be off center in relation to the poles on the P90's (more so at the bridge).  You know what- it made absolutely no difference in how the instrument sounded.  What DOES affect the sound, however, is the height of each string above its corresponding pole.  

  8. 4 hours ago, G Mac said:

    I have an ES-330 that I stuffed surgical cotton into. While it doesn't eliminate feedback, it makes it less prevalent and easier to control. Also, it's less dense than say, socks, so it has less effect on the overall tone of the guitar.

    ...and smells better, too.

  9. The electronics (I assume you mean wiring, pots, jack, etc) really don't have anything to do with it- feedback is the sound (i.e., waves of air) from your amp  vibrating the body of the guitar, and that vibration then getting transmitted by the pickups to your amp to be re-amplified over and over.   This happens more frequently with hollow body instruments because the pickups (mounted to a flexible top) can vibrate somewhat independent of the strings.  About all you can do is move or turn further away from your amp, or stuff socks in the f-holes to make your instrument less resonant (which somewhat defeats the point of having a hollow body in the first place).  

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