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Comments
It does now, it is like putting on an old pair of slippers, so comfortable and sounds superb. Far better than new.
The US postal service is pretty ordinary at the best of times and the Australian mob aren't much better, so it might take a month to get here.
There is an element of ears getting used to it, but there were some lower notes that were really woofy. Like a parametric eq had high gain on some frequencies around 150-250 hz which gave a very obvious peak.
Was playing yesterday and that’s all but gone. Could be a change in the strings but I doubt it, they are coated and in good condition and it happened across all the would strings in varying degrees. It could also be just being out if the case after being in a shipping container for several weeks, rather than the vibration of being played.
This is not bat ears kind of stuff, it’s so obvious a change anybody could hear it. I have spent a lot of hours recording and mixing over the years, at a fairly basic level to be fair, but I can pick out problem areas in a mix or instrument fairly easily. This would have had me trying all sorts, probably a different guitar in the end, whereas now after probably 20 hours playing it would record without issue.
I don’t have a tonerite but I can see it making a difference. Ultimately my guitar is opening up nicely through playing, so it’s not something I need but I can see the potential benefit.
I hope you have a spare room you can run it in
But what happens with carbon fibre guitars?
With all-metal resonators?
With those 80s electric guitars with aluminium necks?
With nylon string guitars?
when they stay in tune day-to-day that’s their way of telling you that they are ready to be changed.