
van hellion
New member
thegame":r3fusst9 said:Tom Andersons use SS and they don't sound like crap.
+1000 i have never had problems getting good tone out of my andersons
A Wood
thegame":r3fusst9 said:Tom Andersons use SS and they don't sound like crap.
They switched over to them at some point. My newest Cobre has SS in it....but the Hollow T and Hollow Cobra (both form the 90's) have reg frets.danyeo":36gn558w said:I owned a Suhr guitar which was the brightest guitar i have ever owned and it just so happened to have stainless steel frets. Coincidence?
Most Anderson i have played didn't have SS frets. It is an option for them though but i don't see many Anderson with SS frets.
But have you refretted one of your personal guitars with SS to compare? Picking up a brand new guitar that happens to have SS frets on them, how can somone say its the frets that make it brighter?SQUAREHEAD":1ypafhkc said:Nice slippery feel to bends!
A "touch" brighter to me but not brash at least in my opinion!!
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King Crimson":85b2zbh7 said:Personally I think stainless steel frets are nothing more than a sales gimmick. Stainless steel frets make your guitar sound less than natural. The stainless is extremely hard and makes the guitar sound brassy, too screechy, bright and too tiny. In many cases this will result in serious listening fatigue.
Parker guitars use stainless steel frets and are the only company I know that actually glues their frets onto the fingerboard - they don't use a "fret tang." Many people object to that Parker sound as being way too bright. In fact, Parker actually upgraded their pickups to compensate for the stainless steel frets. They used to use Dimarzio's and now they finally offer a model with Seymour Duncan pickups – the best electric guitar pickups available on the open market.
Stainless steel frets are way too hard and so is the resulting sound it produces. Absolutely, stainless steel frets last longer, but who wants a guitar with extra long lasting frets if the frets make the instrument sound like crap - unless you desire extra long lasting crap? The stainless steel frets also wear out strings faster than conventional nickel silver frets and the bottom line is their resultant sound is incredibly brittle.
David
Valtiel":9d9demxk said:They can make a *slight* difference, but mostly when playing unplugged. I think it depends on the guitar, if Suhr and Anderson use them then they cant be horrible.
King Crimson":9d9demxk said:Personally I think stainless steel frets are nothing more than a sales gimmick. Stainless steel frets make your guitar sound less than natural. The stainless is extremely hard and makes the guitar sound brassy, too screechy, bright and too tiny. In many cases this will result in serious listening fatigue.
Parker guitars use stainless steel frets and are the only company I know that actually glues their frets onto the fingerboard - they don't use a "fret tang." Many people object to that Parker sound as being way too bright. In fact, Parker actually upgraded their pickups to compensate for the stainless steel frets. They used to use Dimarzio's and now they finally offer a model with Seymour Duncan pickups – the best electric guitar pickups available on the open market.
Stainless steel frets are way too hard and so is the resulting sound it produces. Absolutely, stainless steel frets last longer, but who wants a guitar with extra long lasting frets if the frets make the instrument sound like crap - unless you desire extra long lasting crap? The stainless steel frets also wear out strings faster than conventional nickel silver frets and the bottom line is their resultant sound is incredibly brittle.
David
Im calling HUGE BS on this one. You are either a bitter tech who hates working with the material (I dont blame you if you are) or you have no idea what you are talking about.
Gitfiddler":1q0vy9cj said:Valtiel":1q0vy9cj said:They can make a *slight* difference, but mostly when playing unplugged. I think it depends on the guitar, if Suhr and Anderson use them then they cant be horrible.
King Crimson":1q0vy9cj said:Personally I think stainless steel frets are nothing more than a sales gimmick. Stainless steel frets make your guitar sound less than natural. The stainless is extremely hard and makes the guitar sound brassy, too screechy, bright and too tiny. In many cases this will result in serious listening fatigue.
Parker guitars use stainless steel frets and are the only company I know that actually glues their frets onto the fingerboard - they don't use a "fret tang." Many people object to that Parker sound as being way too bright. In fact, Parker actually upgraded their pickups to compensate for the stainless steel frets. They used to use Dimarzio's and now they finally offer a model with Seymour Duncan pickups – the best electric guitar pickups available on the open market.
Stainless steel frets are way too hard and so is the resulting sound it produces. Absolutely, stainless steel frets last longer, but who wants a guitar with extra long lasting frets if the frets make the instrument sound like crap - unless you desire extra long lasting crap? The stainless steel frets also wear out strings faster than conventional nickel silver frets and the bottom line is their resultant sound is incredibly brittle.
David
Im calling HUGE BS on this one. You are either a bitter tech who hates working with the material (I dont blame you if you are) or you have no idea what you are talking about.
it's a cut and paste of an ed roman article http://www.edroman.com/techarticles/stainlessfrets.htm
mysticaxe":yfbqlvum said:loudgtr":yfbqlvum said:King Crimson":yfbqlvum said:You should try to expand your imagination, then.Greazygeo":yfbqlvum said:I can't imagine too many guys have compared ss to nickle wire in the same guitar.....
Hmmm. No need to say it that way. You feel one way, that's fine. With Anderson and Suhr and other reputable builders using SS; along with clips I've heard of these SS fret equiped guitars I don't think they sound bright to me![]()
I've played some SS fret equiped guitars (don't own any yet) and thought they sounded ok
btw EVH says they don't alter tone at all...![]()
And if there is anything we've learned from history, it's that EVH is an honest, forthright, straight forward individual...![]()
The operative adjective here is "crappy."loudgtr":mipoa1mk said:I just don't think he would have them on his own sig model if they were that sh;ty.
At least you are attempting to listen, however poorly it may be. That was not a direct quote. Try to read a bit more clearly, I have my own interpretation and my right to say what I and many other good guitar builders state is the obvious. Have you ever built a guitar, any guitar that took more than white glue and a dot sheet to put together?Valtiel":3rhibdnj said:But that begs the question, why would anyone want to quote Ed Roman AND take credit for it??!?
Gitfiddler":2n26fpdi said:Valtiel":2n26fpdi said:They can make a *slight* difference, but mostly when playing unplugged. I think it depends on the guitar, if Suhr and Anderson use them then they cant be horrible.
King Crimson":2n26fpdi said:Personally I think stainless steel frets are nothing more than a sales gimmick. Stainless steel frets make your guitar sound less than natural. The stainless is extremely hard and makes the guitar sound brassy, too screechy, bright and too tiny. In many cases this will result in serious listening fatigue.
Parker guitars use stainless steel frets and are the only company I know that actually glues their frets onto the fingerboard - they don't use a "fret tang." Many people object to that Parker sound as being way too bright. In fact, Parker actually upgraded their pickups to compensate for the stainless steel frets. They used to use Dimarzio's and now they finally offer a model with Seymour Duncan pickups – the best electric guitar pickups available on the open market.
Stainless steel frets are way too hard and so is the resulting sound it produces. Absolutely, stainless steel frets last longer, but who wants a guitar with extra long lasting frets if the frets make the instrument sound like crap - unless you desire extra long lasting crap? The stainless steel frets also wear out strings faster than conventional nickel silver frets and the bottom line is their resultant sound is incredibly brittle.
David
Im calling HUGE BS on this one. You are either a bitter tech who hates working with the material (I dont blame you if you are) or you have no idea what you are talking about.
it's a cut and paste of an ed roman article http://www.edroman.com/techarticles/stainlessfrets.htm
How so? Caught what, the fact that you and your other half are wagon pullers with no clue other than what a public forum packed with bad information from (for the most part) hacks willing to take the placebo in leu of reality as truth.AmpliFIRE":12cwd3h5 said:Great catch!!! I love to see Queen Crimson trying to cover this up with his tail between his legs.![]()
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King Crimson":jjb0b5js said:How so? Caught what, the fact that you and your other half are wagon pullers with no clue other than what a public forum packed with bad information from (for the most part) hacks willing to take the placebo in leu of reality as truth.AmpliFIRE":jjb0b5js said:Great catch!!! I love to see Queen Crimson trying to cover this up with his tail between his legs.![]()
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Hey AmpliFIRE, sorry man, but you're a typical moron (Queen Crimson?) and you are turning what could have been a potentially good thread into your imature way, predictive.
King Crimson":1lmkct4o said:At least you are attempting to listen, however poorly it may be. That was not a direct quote. Try to read a bit more clearly, I have my own interpretation and my right to say what I and many other good guitar builders state is the obvious. Have you ever built a guitar, any guitar that took more than white glue and a dot sheet to put together?Valtiel":1lmkct4o said:But that begs the question, why would anyone want to quote Ed Roman AND take credit for it??!?
Many other well known players will agree and state the obviuos, as I have.
Carry on, grasshopper...
Edit: And by the way, I really could care less what you may think of Roman, he's got more knowledge about the design, production and physics of building a great electric guitar in his little Leprecon head than you'll ever understand.
Hi Morgan, Good news on the cover - Thanks!
To say that I am enjoying the bass would be an under-statement. Everything
about it is awesome. I haven't played any of my other basses at a gig
since I got it. It has incredible definition - every note comes through.
King Crimson":1fvdhs3x said:How so? Caught what, the fact that you and your other half are wagon pullers with no clue other than what a public forum packed with bad information from (for the most part) hacks willing to take the placebo in leu of reality as truth.
King Crimson":1tzs2ugi said:How so? Caught what, the fact that you and your other half are wagon pullers with no clue other than what a public forum packed with bad information from (for the most part) hacks willing to take the placebo in leu of reality as truth.