matsickma said:E to d==>Fullscale.
The definition is a little flakey. The 3/4 scale Guild guitars have a upper fret of b or c. Full scale runs up to d. This is a fullscale guitar.
M
hansmoust said:matsickma said:E to d==>Fullscale.
The definition is a little flakey. The 3/4 scale Guild guitars have a upper fret of b or c. Full scale runs up to d. This is a fullscale guitar.
M
A lot of people, me included, don't play up there and therefore don't have the slightest idea what the names of those high register notes would be.
I usually explain it as:
19 frets total (14 frets to the body joint) is the 3/4 scale
22 frets total (16 frets to the body joint) is the regular scale
Sincerely,
Hans Moust
http://www.guitarsgalore.nl
Which one's more?dapmdave said:Thank you, gentlemen. I don't play up there either, but book value varies quite a bit from the 3/4 Freshman to the full-scale version.
Dave
Los Angeles said:Just from casual observing (I don't keep a database or anything) the full scale ones tend to sell for a couple hundred bucks more.
That does make a certain mathematical sense! :lol:dapmdave said:Based on the latest Vintage Guitar Guide that I have (2011) the 3/4 scale is worth almost 25% less.