I'm not trying to be obnoxious about my Warmoth Strat neck on here, but I have to say: originally I had the Roland system on my old Strat that was a decent Squire. It worked ok, as long as there was no string buzz. BUT recently,once I changed it over to my Warmoth guitar - totally different story. I couldn't believe the improvement in tracking. It IS all about feel.Maruuk wrote:Naw, and you raise a good point. That Squire Strat will be 1 5/8ths" at the nut (if not narrower), just like all those Mex and Chinee necks made for 10 year olds. Not true Fender American-standard adult 1 11/16ths". That's going to make for left hand clean fretting and finger picking hell.
I'm partial to 1.75" Warmoths myself. Going down into these kiddie widths is like playing a mandolin.
I had the Warmoth neck totally custom designed for my hand, and for cleaner MIDI picking. It's their Wizard profile, totally thin and fast, but I had the width at the nut done wider - slightly more like a classical guitar, so I could really get in there with clean chord voicings.
The neck is made from African Goncalo Alves. The finger board is pitch black Ebony with really thick, smooth frets. The beautiful dark Goncalo wood is so hard that it doesn't need any finnish. When you play it, the notes go right through your hand, like it's alive. I'll never go back to a plastic finish again. Just raw, prime naked wood. The combination of the necks woods (I was guessing, but got lucky) make the whole guitar ring like a bell. Chimey but with rich warm tone to die for. It plays as straight as a razor, and the strings are practically sitting on the neck. All this DOES transfer over to the MIDI pitch system. It was evident immediately when I switched over.
The whole custom neck was only about $350. I can't recommend one of these enough over any store bought instrument I have ever played. Try it - you'll like it
