Please put your pickup/wiring discussions in the Electronics section; and put discussions about repair issues, including "disappearing" errors in new instruments, in the Repairs section.
This one is a copy of a Rickenbacker 650 Dakota. Worked out pretty good and sounded likewise, made mainly out of leftover parts and woods. I sometimes regret selling it.
Maple neck-thru construction with Walnut wings, greenheart fretboard, Gretsch filtertron pickups and a stainless steel pickguard.
Handsome dude, and handsome guitar. I think I like it better than the "real" Ricks.
I've been pondering this thread a bit because I feel like a lot of times I'll get carried away, obsess about something, and find out that it's sold on Amazon/ebay/aliexpress/etc for cheaper than the cost of my hardware.
That being said, I've never found a good lightweight bass guitar with excellent ergos, passive, and good hardware.
That's my current project. Might try to improve it via a neckthrough in a future build.
YOu'd think someone will have built it already? Eh?
I built an electric fretless guitar for use with an Ebow, only.
I suppose I could have gust bought any fretless and hoped for the best but, there were a few elements I wanted to be specific to this guitar. But, to be fair, I did not build the neck. That was a custom order with Tommy from USA Custom Guitars.
I did however design and build the entire body and electronics, along with some very specific brass appointments.
When I finally built this guitar, I really didn't even know it it would work with and EBow the way I had hoped or imagined that it would. Fortunately, it exceeded my expectations although there are a few limitation. I deal with them. The biggest fear was that having soft finger on one side of the string coupled with wood on the other side would end up damping the string to an unplayable state. But, the Ebow does manage to excite the string decently although a little more slowly on the attack of lower notes.
The neck was ordered with a nice hard ebony fretboard and I had the luthier set the action with a straight neck (no relief) and as low as possible short of any "maauu" that many fretless players look for.
In search of a pickup, I seeked a humbucker for Series/Parallel/cut coil that was noted for having the most extended highs, as to compensate for any expected damping that might occur. much to my surprise, a great deal of the responses at the popular guitar/pickup forum's recommended was the Seymour Duncan Dimebucker. Oddly enough, for being known as a metal pickup with a DCR of 16K, the resonant frequency is upwards of 5.5K even in parallel humbucker configuration.
I find playing with good intonation to be very difficult, as I've been spoiled rotten by frets for many decades. But, starting to develop better intonation and string like lyrical expression. Its a fun trip and very happy with what was really an experiment with no promises. Someday I plan to have generated a little list of tunes/songs to showcase the weird instrument.
Best,
Phil Donovan
I can help you with that. The main thing is that all pic files are too large and you need to compress them down below 3 MiB with a photo processing app. I use "Multiple Image Resizer" on my mac. Then when you are ready to post, go to "Full Editor & Preview" button next to the Submit button. Then post a message and click on the Attachments tab below the window. Click "Add Files" then navigate to your compressed pic file.