<SMALL>How similar or different do they sound? I have old strats thats are very similar years but sound way different. Do you find the same thing with steels???</SMALL>
Yes, very much so. It may be the same kind of wood, it could even be from the same tree - but it's still a different piece.
There are other variables to be sure, but that's the biggie.
If you really want to use it as wallpaper, one of these might be more suitable:
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Rick Alexander on 04 October 2006 at 04:08 PM.]</p></FONT>
Those things are of classic beauty, like some kind of perfect sculpture.
What kinds of wood are they made of? Is there a general opinion how woods effect sound? For example, with acoustic flat tops, most people hear rosewood as darker and bassier.
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"And if we obey God, we must disobey ourselves." --Father Mapple
Just noticed...are those darker stringmasters the same scale length? They look longer than the blond D8's and T8's..?? Oh, and by the way, a nice looking T8 on eBay right now is at $2600 with about 12 hours to go in the auction. If I EVER saw a nice stringmaster in the pawn shop I'd be on that like flies on....u know. lol.
Some serious guitar lust going on there.
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Rick Alexander on 08 October 2006 at 11:58 AM.]</p></FONT>
6K for a '72 telecaster? I sold my '63 Custom Telecaster Double Bound about 10 years ago for 5K. I was doing cartwheels when I sold it. Anyone got a box of Kleenex that I can cry into?
William, forget the Kleenex... you're gonna need a blanket to cry into. According to the '06 VGM price guide a '63 Tele Custom in Ex Cond is worth 23K to 30K. Sorry...
We've all done things like that. I sold my '59 Tele for $130 35 years ago. I also traded my '62 Tele Custom w/bound top and back (like your's) for a junky Fender pedal steel 30 years ago. Live and learn.
If someone had told me in 1964 that my 62 Jaguar would be worth a fortune in the new millennium I would have thought they were high-ly imaginative.
The other guitar player in my band at the time had a 1956 sunburst Strat that was subsequently traded in on a new guitar. Now that Strat would be worth enough to buy a nice house.
It's hard to tell what models & years will accrue vintage value. So the best plan would be just to hang on to those American made Fenders, whenever possible.
especially Stringmasters . .
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Rick Alexander on 09 October 2006 at 08:00 AM.]</p></FONT>
Dad signed me up for hawaiian guitar lessons in 1951 - 60 lessons - one a week for $2 a week. Dad played 6-string and wanted the steel sound to add to the family's weekly jam session (Dad and his brothers). Anyway, my mother saw a new guitar she liked for sale and bought it for Dad as a Christmas present in '52. My youngest brother now owns a completely original '52 gold Les Paul. It's worth more than his house. lol.