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A guitarist's needs are always changing and evolving....so with that you may be right. But for now, all is good. Does not stay in tune though, and that is a problem. Could be that the heavier strings just won't work without some adjustments being made. That could be the problem. They probably put 9's on it, and I bumped up to 11's. Could be the problem. Binding on the bridge saddle? I think anyway.
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04-23-2022 02:57 PM
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Here is a short clip. Not as much of a review as it is more a "test". I will do a full review later. I am also going to post this in the Showcase in case this gets missed here. For distortion, I am using the Way Huge Swollen Pickle fuzz pedal. It gets fairly close to Trey's overall tone, however I don't have the sustain he's got. That would require something more which I currently don't know what all of that involves....but okay, no problem. I am fine without it for now.
Cheers!
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Shortly after making this video, I had to tune up again and the cheap metal hinge that holds the tailpiece in place shattered! Holy crap. Now I can't play. Contacting seller
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look at this! But the company is either going to send out a new bracket, or issue a partial refund. I have asked them to let me know how much before I make a decision.
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I would return the guitar if you can.
A new bracket (same design and materials) will break in the same place.
I don't think other tailpieces are going to be a direct fit and they will likely be the wrong over all length.
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Sorry to hear about the tail piece.
To my limited knowledge, I believe Trey uses a ross compressor and for some reason I think a TS9? (TS8?) is involved...
I would guess a comp would have some relationship to the sustain. However, there are a bunch of elements...
I also forget the differences between a dynacomp (MXR) and the Ross. I think they are very similar. However I remember about 12 years ago getting in a debate about that... who knows. I know that analog man makes a ross type comp.
Just to throw it out, I personally really dig an Orange Juicer (Orange Squeezer), type of comp. If I am using an amp, that might not sound as good as a better amp: I grab my Orange Squeezer, and it typically makes an amp sound a little better. (However, it can take a lot of focus on my pick attack to keep things sounding right. That pedal really fights me).Last edited by st.bede; 04-24-2022 at 01:43 AM.
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Originally Posted by Spook410
Solid Hollow Body Tailpiece Bracket (Ollandocs and any other Langeudoc Clone) | eBay
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The downside of cheap guitars is that they cut corners somewhere. When we're lucky, those corners are cut on the replaceable hardware rather than the woodwork. Hopefully that is the case for your instrument.
I think this explains why your guitar was not staying in tune.
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Originally Posted by Cunamara
Good news is that it was a defected/cheap hinged bracket they used to hold the tailpiece on. Basically the one area that is going to be take the bulk of the tension from the tuned strings! So they went cheap on that little piece (stupid!). Why?
So I was determined today to do something. I have a garage full of stuff, certainly I could at least do something to get this guitar somewhat back up and running again. I rigged it, it certainly is a rig job. I found a tin can I had laying around. I cut it to the shape of the bracket, lined the holes up and marked and then drilled them through. I said a little prayer. Then I brought it back to the guitar and went ahead and slowly and carefully put it back together. It did work. It is a temporary fix. I am buying a real good quality bracket from this guy on ebay.
So now, my guitar is staying in tune! Great news! But of course with all my tweaking, the intonation is out, and I am sure it will need a complete set-up. So when I get the bracket, I am handing this over to my local luthier to do his magic. Been a rough little start but things were expected to be not perfect.
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At this point, I would just suggest doing the intonation yourself and not taking it to the luthier until you get the final bracket for the tail piece, otherwise you'll just have to take it back again. Intonating a guitar with a floating bridge is really easy:
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Originally Posted by Cunamara
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Originally Posted by guitarvegas
Great going.
Your positivity reminds me of my late dad, and your 'I WILL get this finished!' attitude brings to mind some amps I've built from the carcasses of other amps.
You can polish it later, but you can play it tonight !!
Enjoy your guitar. Enjoy it even more!
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Originally Posted by Sam Sherry
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Originally Posted by Sam Sherry
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I love this guitar! I am obsessed with it....can't put it down!!!
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I got this thing pretty stable again. The bridge was not in the right spot and because of that it was causing an issue where it wasn't even laying flat on the body. It was slightly tilted due to stress from the taughtness of the strings. Once I brought it up (moved it) where it should be it resolved a lot. Now it stays in tune. Great! So my little rig set-up worked for the time being. New bracket ordered and will have that in a few days. Then I will be less stressed too, once everything is actually right.
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I think with the demand out there for this guitar, the right thing for Paul to do would be to license the design to a quality company. It would still be expensive but I would think a good version could be made for $5,000.
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Originally Posted by guitarvegas
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Originally Posted by jazzgtrl4
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After a year? I know this thread is old... I had a chance to see a Languedoc up close and hold it, play it unplugged. I can say that the level of detail he puts into small things, like bindings around the pickup covers is pretty unreal.
Chet Baker - Do It The Hard Way, Scat Solo...
Today, 03:35 PM in Ear Training, Transcribing & Reading