Where is all the Schecter love around here? Rant inside.

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lolzgreg

lolzgreg

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Schecter%20%20Family%20Shot%201.jpg


Where is all the Schecter love around here?

As a studio engineer and gear head, I am very fortunate to have a lot of friends and artists who bring a lot of axes through here. I have recorded and played Dean, Paul Reed Smith, Gibson, Jackson, Charvel, Bernie Rico, Guerilla, Suhr, GJ2, Fender, Ibanez, Yamaha, G&L, Parker, Peavey, Fernandes, Caparison, Stinnett, and many other guitars.

One of my musical partners in crime, Rodney of Voice of Dissent (http://www.vodmetal.com) turned me on to Schecter Guitars earlier this year, and I have not looked back since.

The guitar in front, a Schecter Solo-6 Custom is the Les Paul killer in my book. The fret access and comfortable heel feels great in the hands. The Duncan Custom Custom in the bridge and '59 in the neck compliment the axe perfectly; I actually don't even want to try anything else in there.

The second guitar in, a Schecter Shaun Morgan Signature is a homage to the Mosrite guitars of the past, but with some modern appointments like a larger neck radius, a longer scale length, and a kill switch. I have a Motor City Pickups Hellbaby in there, and it is a mean sounding axe.

The one in the back is a Schecter Stiletto Elite-5. There is a huge span of tonal options on this baby with the pickup blending control and the active preamp rocks.

Every one of the instruments has phenomenal fretwork, was intonated properly from the factory AND was affordable. Their most expensive non custom shop model ranks in at $1200, which is what many other manufacturers's mid or even base models cost.

Quality control is really for the birds with many popular companies nowadays. I played TWO high dollar USA Jacksons, a Soloist, and a Kelly, that both had sharp fret ends that dug into your hand on both the treble and bass sides of the neck. On a $3000 instrument, is this acceptable? I tried three new Gibson Les Pauls at Guitar Center last month that wouldn't stay in tune for shit due to how poorly the nut was cut and those horrid Kluson tuners they use on half of the models they sell.

Out of new manufacturers aside from Schecter, I've found Fender/Charvel (yes, I'm aware they make Jackson too, but I've had poor experiences with their guitars), PRS, and Suhr are really doing a great job in terms of quality control, but you are going to be paying a good deal more for a high quality instrument from them.

I own guitars other than Schecters that I really enjoy too, but I figure since this is a community of guitarists supporting guitarists, I would turn a few of you on to a company that has been doing some great work as of late :rock:

Cheers,

Greg
 
I've always wanted one of the Schecter PT models. Schecter makes great guitars and overall is very underrated.
 
the korean ones are made in the same factory as the LTDs were, and i found them to be very similar quality wise, definitely greate guitars for the price....jus never got along with their designs
 
I have a Schecter Omen Extreme 6 that is a great guitar. I just prefer my Les Paul.
 
3 or 4 years ago I had a Schecter Blackjack 7 and was decent for it's price point.
 
My first "nice" guitar was a Schecter and I saved up a long time working in the basement of some shitty dollar store. I remember when I got it and loving the crap out of it! It was too bright for me tonally and it looked kind of tacky but a VERY playable guitar no doubt.

I am thinking about buying more now that I have the means and modding the shit out of them!
 
xzyryabx":q50r811f said:
the korean ones are made in the same factory as the LTDs were, and i found them to be very similar quality wise, definitely greate guitars for the price....jus never got along with their designs




This!
 
I like Schecter. A couple weeks ago I got a Schecter Studio 8 bass guitar. Neck through, 8 strings, active electronics, it's very nice.
 
I still really dig my C-1 Classic. Sounds good and is rock solid as far build and tuning stability go. My wife bought it for me in '06 or so. :thumbsup:
 
To me they always look liked a cheap guitar that they tried hard to make look expensive.
 
I like the way they look but the name is too difficult to pronounce (Sah-Kah-Check-Kah-Tour) so unfortunately I can't buy one.
 
i'm sure they're decent guitars, i just don't like how they look. they all look weird to me
 
I have had a Schecter Hellraiser 7 string for year that I love.
 
I guess I never gave them a chance because I never really dug the body shapes and I'm not a fan of the headstocks. I've heard many times over the years though about the great quality and playability.
 
nevusofota":2eu9dmzx said:
I guess I never gave them a chance because I never really dug the body shapes and I'm not a fan of the headstocks. I've heard many times over the years though about the great quality and playability.

I think the guitars in the OP look great, including the headstocks. Obviously, a matter or taste. I also dig the headstock on the ESP/LTD Viper.
 
lolzgreg":1mk6kv4p said:
Schecter%20%20Family%20Shot%201.jpg


Quality control is really for the birds with many popular companies nowadays. I played TWO high dollar USA Jacksons, a Soloist, and a Kelly, that both had sharp fret ends that dug into your hand on both the treble and bass sides of the neck. On a $3000 instrument, is this acceptable?

Greg

Sharp fret ends are usually caused by too dry a climate, and a guitar could be fine at the factory but if the guitar shop or place it 'lives' is really dry, the wood can shrink? Haven't seen it so much on bound fingerboards, but seen it happen on a number of guitars that were fine one day and a few days later, sharp fret ends. It's not a QC issue so much as a bad environment issue. Even a 3000 dollar instrument isn't immune to the effects of climate.

Here's one even better - our local Best Buy was selling Taylor acoustics with cracked tops (obviously at huge discounts). One of my friends is the local Taylor authorized service center, he said it was due to the lack of humidity/how dry the area was where they were storing guitars. Everyone was buying these guitars, and then having him repair them.
 
I'm really digging the Jerry Horton Solo Signature guitar with the skull.... on my list for my next purchase.
 
I have a Schecter 7 string, and like it alot. They're stuff is a great value imo.
 
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