
kasperjensen
New member
Sure, dentists may love them. But a lot of Professional guitar players do too... 

blackba":1e8z29cm said:One of my friends who is a huge PRS fan and loves his PRS, also hates strats with a passion. He would also complain when playing a strat on the few songs that called for it. So if the PRS neck is like a strat neck, I am confused by your statement that if you like strat necks, you will like PRS necks.![]()
I am a strat guy, so maybe I will like PRS necks. I know I typically do not like shredder guitar necks like Jackson, ESP, etc.
drgordonfreeman":1z3bgu4p said:racerevlon":1z3bgu4p 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.
I used to think that same thing until I discussed it with a few different luthiers/builders who all concurred that it's every bit as labor intensive to build a quality bolt on neck and neck pocket as it is to build a set neck guitar (and frequently more labor intensive than a neck through design)...it's very dependent on the tolerances used. I believe Tom Anderson may have addressed this as well on his forum but I can't remember for sure.steve_k":322qi1ao said:At least with say the Custom 24 you get a set neck. What I don't get is $3000-4000+ guitars with a bolt on neck.
kasperjensen":hy7fyajw said:Sure, dentists may love them. But a lot of Professional guitar players do too...![]()
rlord1974":7n9b241w said:blackba":7n9b241w said:One of my friends who is a huge PRS fan and loves his PRS, also hates strats with a passion. He would also complain when playing a strat on the few songs that called for it. So if the PRS neck is like a strat neck, I am confused by your statement that if you like strat necks, you will like PRS necks.![]()
I am a strat guy, so maybe I will like PRS necks. I know I typically do not like shredder guitar necks like Jackson, ESP, etc.
I'm primarily a Strat guy and I like the PRS necks just fine. I think you will too.
I also generally dislike the super thin, "shredder" type necks with the compound or otherwise higher radius fingerboards.
Agreed.steve_k":3cwtm01c said:What I don't get is $3000-4000+ guitars with a bolt on neck.
Based on what?Ventura":1jg710ji said:Agreed.steve_k":1jg710ji said:What I don't get is $3000-4000+ guitars with a bolt on neck.
Well saidShawn Lutz":26een2og said:I have no clue. I don't own any PRS's guitars but the ones I have seen in person were excellent guitars. I think bashing and dentist comments are based on younger folks or others out of jealousy. The costs are not cheap for those guitars ans a lot of Gibsons but it doesn't mean they are not great guitars. Also I see folks play one single brand one time and hate the brand off of one try. There are great guitars and crappy guitars in every model line....yes your 5000 guitar may not be a great guitar or a guitar the fraction of the cost can be 2x as good![]()
Mokaccino":1p03c7u7 said:I dunno why you folks get your panties in a bunch over that... I've played good and bad Gibsons, good and bad PRS and the list goes on...
This is very simple: you grab the guitar, you like it, you get it. Play whatever melts your butter, regardless of what's written on the headstock.
My 2 best guitars at the moment, my go-to guitars, my do-it-all guitars are a cheap Fender Blacktop Strat (swapped the pups for some that I had home) and a Franken-Floyded-Strat with some Warmoth neck that plays incredibly good. I think I got both instruments for less than 500$ as previous owners thought they were unplayable junks. Gave them a little love and bingo here we are at sunny times.
Play what you like, why would you care about what others think?
spirit7":scg75xoy said:The constant comparisons to Gibson irritate me. People need to get it into their heads that PRS is not trying to emulate Gibson.