Korgscrew
Group: Super Admins
Posts: 3511
Joined: Dec. 1999 |
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Posted: Mar. 09 2006, 08:31 |
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I'll start with 2 first...
It's apparently a PRS Signature - a limited edition Custom with higher grades of wood, with the headstock hand signed by Paul Reed Smith. I'm not 100% certain that it actually is, though - I'll check that up if I get a chance. Signature or not, its features are that of an early Custom (there was no Custom 22 when Mike's was made, so what's now called a Custom 24 was simply a Custom) - the controls are volume, a 5-way rotary pickup selector (available selections being bridge pickup, bridge + neck outside coils in parallel, the bridge + neck inside coils in series, the inside coils in parallel, and the neck pickup) and a sweet switch (a kind of treble roll off, which replaces a tone control).
As far as I know, it has a regular neck profile.
Quality difference...a rather heated topic. Some do maintain that the hand built ones are better. I would certainly say that the more guitars a company makes per year, the harder it's going to get for them to find woods of the absolute highest quality. Beyond that... Using computer controlled machinery to make guitars doesn't necessarily make them worse - it's all down to quality control. Shove in any old bits of wood and stick them together as soon as they come out of the machine and there's a chance of a good guitar coming out, but also a chance of a bad one coming out. Select the pieces carefully, and check them afterwards before assembly, and there's no reason it won't be as good as a hand built guitar (though whether it will be as special to its owner is a different matter - the romance factor certainly plays a part). PRS would undoubtedly tell you that they follow something more like the second philosophy...whether they do or not is something you'll have to decide by looking at and playing their guitars...
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