#1
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My acoustic adventure today
Today I travelled up to Dusty Strings in Seattle to sample a range of guitars. I am really impressed with the staff -- they let me sit in a semi-private booth so I could play the guitars away from the twanging and banging in the rest of the store. I can heartily recommend Dusty Strings based on my experience. The prices seem to be reasonable too.
I am in particular interested in short scale, and was able to make a straight on comparison which really helped me understand how much easier the short scale is. The most direct comparison was two Collings C10's, one a 25.5" scale and the other 24.875. The tops were both Sitka, but the short scale had EIR back/sides and the long scale had Mahogany, so there's no chance I could evaluate tonal differences to to scale length. They both have a 1 3/4" nut. And, for me, at least the ease of playing the "long reach", barred on the 2nd fret, pinky up on the 7th fret was noticeable. That question answered -- I played a Collings OM with Adirondack top, Webber OM, Goodall Standard, R. Taylor Style 1, Santa Cruze F model, Martin 000-18 and 000-18ge. About half were short scale guitars. I could always notice the easier playability of the short scales. If I was going to take one home, it would've been the Webber or R. Taylor, both of those felt very natural to my hands, and had the Webber been a short scale ooooh I would have had a tough time walking away with out a tear or two I think, given my budget (up to $3k) and ultimate desires, a cedar top Webber 00 would be a great fit for me. Time for patience, me thinks |
#2
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Yup, Dusty Strings is a great place. You might want to try a Huss & Dalton 00...small body, big volume, rich sound, short-scale. I'd think Dusty carries them.
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#3
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Dusty has some great stuff.
You can check out Huss & Dalton and Santa Cruz at A Sharp in Renton if you're looking to compare those brands as well. |
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long scale, short scale, webber guitars |
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