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Re: "Gilmour" strat - a good buy? [message #102265 is a reply to message #102258] |
Fri, 23 January 2009 20:09 |
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Resale value probably not much to write home about. Buy it because you love
it, not because it'll be worth anything in 10 years. With that in mind I'd
say that you need to play a guitar before you buy it. I'm not much on buying
guitars without having played them and plugged them in. Unless wheeling
and dealing on ebay is something you enjoy!
Gantt
"D.P." <guitar.ottawa@gmail.com> wrote:
>I am considering a guitar described below... not the official Fender custom
>shop Gilmour special which sells for a lot of money, but rather a tweaked
>USA strat. Can anyone comment on the resale value of a guitar like that?
>I've also never played a maple fretboard (more used to rosewood or ebony)...
>does one easily adapt to that change?
>
>Any input appreciated (I know I have to try the guitar and see how it
>actually feels... I'm looking for general opinions). For reference, the
>asking price is $1K. Thanks.
>
>
>"USA Fender strat converted to Gilmour strat (the chrome red metallic one
he
>used from the 80's to the late 90's). Circa 1996 chrome red with maple/maple
>neck, microtilt adjustment, naturally aged vintage amber with wear spots.
>Very fast action. With Fender lsr roller nut, Fender diecast staggered
>tuners. DG-20 EMG (David Gilmour signature electronics stock EMG) with
>special active equalizing. Modern USA Fender bridge with Feraglide strat
>saddles (by Graphtech). Aged vintage white trim kit (knobs, switch tip,
and
>tremolo arm tip). Tremolo arm is shortened to 4 1/4" like Gilmour's. Pickups
>are also vintage aged white with gold lettering. David Gilour laser-etched
>neck plate. Single ply aged white pickguard will also be supplied (the EMG
>pickguard assembly is pearloid). Teardrop hardshell case included."
>
>
>
Gantt Kushner
Gizmo Recording Company
Silver Spring, MD
www.gizmorecording.com
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