moose23 wrote:I always thought neck through meant the centrepiece of the body was the same piece as the neck, otherwise it'd be a set neck or have I missed out on something?
You are absolutely right, my man. It is
in fact a set-neck and not a neck-through. My bad!
But what's really cool is, mine is only the second set-neck "benchmade" one they've built.
Everything before that was bolt-on, and most of their models still continue to be so.
So mine will end up looking a lot like this
but with maple stripes in place of the black ones greeting the neck like that

instead of looking like this (with them sturdy sturdy bolts)

Achtane wrote:Nice!
What's up with the neck pickup in those? What is it?
As far as I'm aware, both pickups are from here:
http://www.lacemusic.com/electric_picku ... ickups.phpWith the Neck being #2 "Hot Gold" Sensor series, and Bridge looking like #13 "Drop and Gain."
Lace is an American company and they do things a little differently, but essentially it's
a strat or tele -style "single coil" (-ish) neck p-up and a modified 'bucker style p-up at the bridge.
Scott may do something special to them once he gets them, I honestly do not know.
The Varitone thing is a neat take on the standard tone-knob circuit, swapping for a
rotary chickenhead knob that cuts more high frequency with each successive position.
Here's the site, though, for those interested in more details / pretty pics
http://www.birdsongguitars.com A pretty thorough and friendly website.
They also make five-strings now! And they do a variation on the fender p-bass. Go check it out!
He used to have a way more densely populated gallery, but the company's actually getting bigger.
Dude's real cool to talk with, too, not just about bizness but about music, life, whatever . . .
Scott's a self-described Granola-Gnome-type, Out there in the Woods doing what he loves
