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  2. Jackson Rhoads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackson_Rhoads

    RR5: RR5 has a maple through-body neck with alder wings and rosewood fretboard. The main difference between RR5 and RR3 is a neck-through and a fixed bridge for RR5 vs a bolt-on neck and a floating bridge for RR3. RR5 also features gold hardware, Seymour Duncan TB4 and SH4 humbucker pickups, and a string-through body.

  3. Gibson J-200 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_J-200

    In 1947 the materials used for the guitar changed to maple back and sides. Gibson changed the name to the J-200 in 1955. Due to the weak post-depression economy and wartime austerity, demand for this high-end guitar was very limited and production quantities were small. Early models made from rosewood are highly prized by collectors.

  4. Fingerboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fingerboard

    Fretted classical guitar fingerboard Fretless violin fingerboard The fingerboard (also known as a fretboard on fretted instruments) is an important component of most stringed instruments . It is a thin, long strip of material, usually wood, that is laminated to the front of the neck of an instrument.

  5. Jackson Dinky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackson_Dinky

    Fully loaded having 3 pickups, one with reverse headstock (PS-4), 24 frets and floyd rose tremolos. PS-1, PS-2 and PS-4 have Alder solid body, and PS-3 has Poplar body (as seen at official catalogs). It is a great choice to get off the cheaper basswood guitars. All models have maple neck and rosewood fretboard.

  6. Tonewood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonewood

    On inexpensive guitars, it is increasingly common to use roseacer for the fretboard, which mimics rosewood, but is actually a form of thermally-modified maple. "Roasted" maple necks are increasingly popular as manufacturers claim increased stiffness and stability in changing conditions (heat and humidity).

  7. Gibson ES-345 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_ES-345

    The ES-335, 345 and 355, all came with a semi-hollow body: the wood of the top and back was maple and there was a maple center block inside the guitars which ran the length of the body all the way to the mahogany neck, with a rosewood fingerboard. [2] The neck of the guitar has double-parallelogram fretboard inlays. The guitar also featured a ...

  8. Gibson L6-S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_L6-S

    Colours on sale in 2012 are "Antique natural" - like the original 1970s all-maple maple neck L6-S - and "Silverburst" with a baked maple fretboard. No ebony fretboard model is on sale. The current L6S neck does not feature the unique "narrow at the nut and wider near the body" taper of the 1970s guitar, but a conventional Gibson shape.

  9. Fender Bullet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fender_Bullet

    In 1986 Squier released the contemporary HST ( Hybrid Strat/Tele ) Bullet, E prefix serial on the neck plate, the guitar had a more pointy shaped telecaster style body with 3 pickups HSS configuration (Humbucker, single coil, single coil), a rosewood board on maple neck with a strat shaped headstock, no pickguard & a two pivot tremolo, this was ...

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