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A notorious firesale of surplus necks, bodies and hardware was held out of New Jersey. In order to recover their losses, ESP in Japan assembled their surplus bodies and necks, using their own and locally-sourced hardware such as Gotoh tuners, and sold them exclusively in the Japan domestic market as "Kramer by ESP." [3] [4]
Starting in the 1970s, Carvin developed a niche in the musical instrument world by selling directly to the public via mail order. In the late 1970s, Carvin began the production of their own instrument parts and expanded their product lines to include professional audio gear, amps, recording equipment , lighting, and other stage and studio ...
Schecter Guitar Research, commonly known simply as Schecter, is an American manufacturing company founded in 1976 by David Schecter, which originally produced only replacement parts for existing guitars from manufacturers such as Fender and Gibson.
Some basses have three or more necks, but usually upon custom order only. A double-necked bass guitar can be used for multiple tuning (e.g., B-E-A-D on one neck and E-A-D-G on the other, etc.); combining fretted and fretless necks; combining necks with different numbers of strings, etc.
The heel is the term used to describe the thickened area of the end of the neck and/or body where the neck is attached to the body. Body-neck connection area thickening is required for structural integrity. In violins this area's called the "button", "saddle" or "nose". The area where the neck attaches to the body is naturally a weak zone.
Neck joint with a four-screw plate on a Yamaha Pacifica 112 electric guitar Less-common three-screw assembly with plate, on a Hagström III guitar Slim bolt-on neck join with chamfered heel and countersunk ferrules on a superstrat electric guitar allows for more comfortable access to top frets Stephen's Extended Cutaway (on Washburn N4 electric guitar) is another version of bolt-on neck joint