#1
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Cracked neck: Should I buy it?
I came across a a beautiful ovation guitar for sale, but the neck shows some cracks. I would like to hear your opinion before I decide, are those cracks dangerous or not?
https://imgur.com/7dcNTbK https://imgur.com/vulKQRC |
#2
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How much are they asking ?
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#3
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Unless you're looking for firewood I'd pass on it.
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#4
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Ovations don't even make for good firewood. All that plastic creates some really nasty fumes...
Seriously, though, no way would I consider that guitar, unless it was free. (Actually, I wouldn't want an Ovation even if it was free, but that's just my personal preference and is of no importance here.) The fact that those crack lines are symmetric suggest that they're not just cosmetic but structural. I appears that this guitar just barely escaped a snapped headstock. Unless we're talking a super-rare, come-across-once-in-a-lifetime kind of instrument, I wouldn't even give a guitar with that kind of damage a second look.
__________________
"I've always thought of bluegrass players as the Marines of the music world" – (A rock guitar guy I once jammed with) Martin America 1 Martin 000-15sm Recording King Dirty 30s RPS-9 TS Taylor GS Mini Baton Rouge 12-string guitar Martin L1XR Little Martin 1933 Epiphone Olympic 1971 square neck Dobro |
#5
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The string tension will pull to close the cracks, not make them bigger. Chances are it will be OK. Nevertheless, it hurts the resale significantly, so unless the guitar is priced well below what it would be without the cracks, I'd pass.
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#6
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That does not appear to be a professional repair job.
__________________
1 dreadnought, 1 auditorium, 1 concert, and 2 travel guitars. |
#7
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I would not buy it.
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#8
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No you should not.
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#9
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Maybe you could use it for this;
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#10
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Agree with all the above: PASS
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#11
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Hard pass.
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Please note: higher than average likelihood that any post by me is going to lean heavily on sarcasm. Just so we’re clear... |
#12
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No, unless its free.
__________________
Barry My SoundCloud page Avalon L-320C, Guild D-120, Martin D-16GT, McIlroy A20, Pellerin SJ CW Cordobas - C5, Fusion 12 Orchestra, C12, Stage Traditional Alvarez AP66SB, Seagull Folk Aria {Johann Logy}: |
#13
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Looks like a classic whiplash break to me. One can argue over the quality of the repair. But the damage makes it worth *at best* 50% of the undamaged price. It would have to sound and play pretty special and be aggressively priced to warrant any further interest, IMO. Maybe not quite free, but minimal cash value -- free guitar with case priced at $$$. If you ever went to sell again, you'd be stuck with it. The market is flooded with fine examples that have no damage.
If it were an Adamas or one of their special annual editions that are semi-collectible, the interest is just barely there. |
#14
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Pass on this one. There are plenty of good Ovations out there that don’t come with cracks in the neck.
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It won’t always be like this. |
#15
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I suggest having the guitar appraised to see what it is worth and what it would cost to have it repaired.
If the price is to your liking, go for it. Necks can and do get repaired all the time. The question is, is the guitar worth the price of the purchase and the repairs?
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Happiness Is A New Set Of Strings L-20A |
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Tags |
crack, ovation, repair |
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