Carter starter? Good or bad?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Carter starter? Good or bad?
I tried PS awhile back and figured i didn't have enough time left to give it the attention it deserves and demands. I had a nice Fessenden S10 worked over by Tom Bradshaw and it was sweet but......alas I sold it. there's a Carter starter set with everything you need on fleabay I'm thinking of pulling the trigger on at about $600 with a lot of extras. Then if I feel like I get some real music going I'd step up some. I would sure appreciate some input from you folks. With best regards, Larry Otis
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I have a GFI Ultra D10 but we spend 4 months living in a trailer in PA during the summer and the GFI is just too big for the trailer so I have a Carter Starter just for that purpose. I like it fine. It's tone is very good and it stays in tune so well. The only downside with it is the long travel of left knee right (lowering the E's) that I have not as yet solved. You cannot change the pedal/knee lever arrangement but hey for $600-700 it is a fine guitar.
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It will stay in tune very well, the pickup sounds pretty decent & it is very light-weight.
I had a Carter Starter & everytime I move my heavier steels around...I wish I still had it!!! I think it weighed in at 26lbs...it's a very portable steel & it would be great if you were tkaing it back & forth between lessons or something.
Casey
I had a Carter Starter & everytime I move my heavier steels around...I wish I still had it!!! I think it weighed in at 26lbs...it's a very portable steel & it would be great if you were tkaing it back & forth between lessons or something.
Casey
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Carter Starter? Good or bad?
Thank you all. I'm sold. Regards, Larry Otis
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Carter starter
I am one of the snobs who said unkind things & raised a few hackles when I made some foolish comments re a C.S in a local music store. As fate would have it I am giving lessons to the gent who bought it. Other than the problem Ben mentioned re lowering the E's it is easy to transport & tune,& the tone is just fine. Again my apologies to ALL offended parties. Billy Lee Fraser
Billy Lee ,Pro-II,, Session 400,Session 500 , Supro , National, SpeedDemons,& too many Archtops & Stratotones.Lots of vintage parts for Kay ! etc.
- Jeff Harbour
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Funny this would come up. I just ordered the hard shell case for my Starter, and It should be here tomorrow. Even though I now have a GFI D-10, the Starter is gonna fit much better on the packed church stage as well as be easier to carry in.
As a long-time guitar player, I equate it with my Epiphone Emperor: Inexpensive compared to an equivalant classic Gibson, but NOT "cheap" by any means.
As a long-time guitar player, I equate it with my Epiphone Emperor: Inexpensive compared to an equivalant classic Gibson, but NOT "cheap" by any means.
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I've been checking out that new Jackson Blackjack. That would be my choice for an entry level "priced" guitar. The guitar looks like a pro model to me and it's upgradeable. The underside looks better than the CS. What I mean is the linkage looks stronger. I hear that it's light. Maybe not to light that it's a problem being stable. Anyway, I would at least check this guitar out for a first guitar.
Jackson Blackjack
True, but there's a big price difference once you add the KLs.
It's more of a pro model. Jackson's web site even calls it a "professional grade guitar "
It's more of a pro model. Jackson's web site even calls it a "professional grade guitar "
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Carter Starter
You obviously don,t know Bud Carter's reputation in the steel guitar business.
- Mark van Allen
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The CS are a great entry into steel, affordable, and keep their value resonably well when you want to upgrade. Kudos to Carter for making these available- I'll bet in a few years we'll see a number of pros who started on these guitars.
Apart from the long knee throw mentioned, one thing I've seen on every one of these that my students bring in- one of the knee levers uses a round head phillips screw as the body stop- and with the little bit of slop in the knee lever, the end of the lever can slip off the screw to one side or the other, pulling the change too far, and eventually bending the lever or bracket. Beginners can't tell if it's the guitar, or them.
I always take out that screw and replace it with a small piece of flat aluminum, so the lever can't slip. I think that needs to be done on every one of these.
Apart from the long knee throw mentioned, one thing I've seen on every one of these that my students bring in- one of the knee levers uses a round head phillips screw as the body stop- and with the little bit of slop in the knee lever, the end of the lever can slip off the screw to one side or the other, pulling the change too far, and eventually bending the lever or bracket. Beginners can't tell if it's the guitar, or them.
I always take out that screw and replace it with a small piece of flat aluminum, so the lever can't slip. I think that needs to be done on every one of these.
Thanks, Mark. Great advice--should be forwarded to Carter. That phillips head screw stop is a bad idea they ought to do away with. Absolute worst feature of the Starter.Mark van Allen wrote:I always take out that screw and replace it with a small piece of flat aluminum, so the lever can't slip. I think that needs to be done on every one of these.
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