racerevlon":9aaji0kt said:
I've played MANY a PRS guitar. Most of them sounded good/great. All of them played like dog shit. I've never found a PRS neck I find to be anywhere near playable. All their neck profiles suck and there's also something off about the string spacing. I can go from Gibson to Fender to Suhr to Ibanez to Riszanyi to Moser to Epiphone to ESP to BC RICH to Charvel all day long, but give me a PRS and I become Edward Scissorhands. If someone gave me a $10,000 custom PRS I would sell it and buy 2-5 guitars I REALLY like.
Which brings up the final point. His prices are ludicrous and based solely on perceived value <cough>Gibson<cough>.
I couldn't agree with this more.
I owned a 1997 PRS Custom 24. Bought it brand new. Sold it exactly 11 months later, because it felt like dog shit to play. It looked AMAZING. To this day, it's one of the best looking guitars I've ever owned, not to mention, one of the most expensive. However, it simply didn't live up to its looks. The problem with the feel of the guitar was all in the neck.
IMHO, one of the biggest problems with PRS necks is that they all have -- with the exception of the Santana model -- a 10 inch radius. That's a fairly vintage and rounded radius. Most modern guitars start at 12 inches at least and go from there. A 10 inch radius is like playing a Fender Strat neck. If you like Strat necks, you'll love PRS necks. If you like palying Stevie Ray Vaughn and the Beatles, then you probably love Fender and PRS necks. If you like playing Metallica, Megadeth, etc, then you're probably barking up the wrong tree trying to own a PRS or Fender. Before people start citing the Jim Root Strat, that has a compound 12-14 radius on it.
PRS has made some headway in this area a little bit. First, the Pattern Thin neck is actually a really good feeling neck. It's not too far off from a Jackson "speed" neck. Second, they're offering a new guitar called the Torero that has a 14 inch radius on it. I think PRS is getting the message, but they're just very slow at it.
Lastly, PRS prices are insane. However, people are easily amused creatures, and we like shiny things. The shinier something is, the more we'll pay for it. PRS guitars are very attractive guitars.