
and a custom I probably should have kept also:

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The Rickenbacker sounded good, but in actuality not as good as my D8 Ricky does...not sure why, perhaps it was the hollow body on that T8...I think you made a good choice going with the Stringmaster...I am trying to swing a deal on one myselfNic Neufeld wrote:Very nice! How did she sound? I came very close to buying a Ric tripleneck that was on Reverb.com recently...went with the Stringmaster because it was a better deal, and if pickups ever needed replacing, an $80 Seymour Duncan Antiquity is a lot less painful than a $600 Lollar horseshoe. Still though, the Rics have always tugged at my heart strings (bought a 4003 bass when I was 18, and a huge Yes fan).
Yeah, the R triple I looked at had kind of a hollow box frame but not the metal frame around the edges, it looked like an organ console almost with the side panels. I wondered if that kind of construction could influence sustain. Pretty guitar, to be sure, but destined for someone else!Larry Lenhart wrote: The Rickenbacker sounded good, but in actuality not as good as my D8 Ricky does...not sure why, perhaps it was the hollow body on that T8...I think you made a good choice going with the Stringmaster...I am trying to swing a deal on one myself
Well, as far as the Triple Custom is concerned, I would say it IS nearly as cumbersome as a quad.Larry Lenhart wrote:I think the triple is the right way to go...not nearly as cumbersome as the quad,

