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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink 24" to 25.5" scale.

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Sweet jesus this is hard. It doesn't help that my Jazzmaster's slots for the strings won't hold any thing but the low e string. Also, the "F" tuners won't take my low E or A string. But I can still get it string up.

The 25.5" scale is quite helpful to my slide playing though. I think George Harrison was on to something when he used that strat for slide guitar.

where's the problem Jake? I remeber when I had an SGV I couldn't switch between my strat and that one. in fact I never agreed with the SGV at all, sold it for that reason alone. I figured it was the short scale, so I took a bit of a gamble when I got my jag. but the jag felt right and played like buttah from day one, and I find it easy to switch between the strat and the jag.

are you going to have the JM set up again?

WR

Rules to live by #314:
"When in Italy, if the menu says something's grilled, don't assume it is."

https://www.facebook.com/The-Malbehavers-286429584796173/

Yeah, I'll have it set up.

Question has anyone out there had trouble with their hands when switching between scale lengths??? sgs, pauls hell most gibsons==my hand no like!! strats. teles areno problem. i got a taylor baby m that is great, the hand is fine. still interested in a jag (mom surfings fault!) in spite of the short scale. just use to fenders i guess Wink

The reason I stayed away from Jaguars early on was because of the scale length. I mainly played Strats and Jazzmasters. the shortest scale I had was a Gretsch 6120. Had my bassist not bought a Jaguar I may still feel the same way.
I'd have more trouble with the closer string spacing on a Mosrite than a Jag's short scale.

There's a guitarist here in Chicago, Joel Patterson who plays with the Four Charms and I've seen him go from a longer scale Epiphone hollowbody to a Gibson Byrdland(which is a shorter scale than the Jaguar) and he sounds quite good on both, and he made it look effortless.
I've seen guys in bluegrass bands go from mandolin to guitar to banjo with no problem, and that stuff is more difficult than surf guitar. When you get down to it 24" to 25.5" is really nothing.

"as he stepped into the stealthy night air... little did he know the fire escape was not there"

https://www.facebook.com/reluctantaquanauts/
https://www.facebook.com/TheDragstripVipers/

BillAqua
The reason I stayed away from Jaguars early on was because of the scale length. I mainly played Strats and Jazzmasters. the shortest scale I had was a Gretsch 6120. Had my bassist not bought a Jaguar I may still feel the same way.
I'd have more trouble with the closer string spacing on a Mosrite than a Jag's short scale.

There's a guitarist here in Chicago, Joel Patterson who plays with the Four Charms and I've seen him go from a longer scale Epiphone hollowbody to a Gibson Byrdland(which is a shorter scale than the Jaguar) and he sounds quite good on both, and he made it look effortless.
I've seen guys in bluegrass bands go from mandolin to guitar to banjo with no problem, and that stuff is more difficult than surf guitar. When you get down to it 24" to 25.5" is really nothing.

I have no problem on 'ukulele but 24 to 25.5 kills me.

JakeDobner

BillAqua
The reason I stayed away from Jaguars early on was because of the scale length. I mainly played Strats and Jazzmasters. the shortest scale I had was a Gretsch 6120. Had my bassist not bought a Jaguar I may still feel the same way.
I'd have more trouble with the closer string spacing on a Mosrite than a Jag's short scale.

There's a guitarist here in Chicago, Joel Patterson who plays with the Four Charms and I've seen him go from a longer scale Epiphone hollowbody to a Gibson Byrdland(which is a shorter scale than the Jaguar) and he sounds quite good on both, and he made it look effortless.
I've seen guys in bluegrass bands go from mandolin to guitar to banjo with no problem, and that stuff is more difficult than surf guitar. When you get down to it 24" to 25.5" is really nothing.

I have no problem on 'ukulele but 24 to 25.5 kills me.

It's in your HEAD!

"as he stepped into the stealthy night air... little did he know the fire escape was not there"

https://www.facebook.com/reluctantaquanauts/
https://www.facebook.com/TheDragstripVipers/

And my finger that doesn't go sideways at all.

Up in Guiteaven, Django is saying "Pussy..."

I remember reading a lot of stuff about scale length before I got my Cyclone 2. I've played 25.5 my whole life, and I tale ya, it makes little difference to me. And I can easily switch back and forth between the two.

Now, the SGV (Yamaha I assume) was a different story. I had one. Loved the sound, but frets are small compared to my Fenders, and I have pretty small fingers.

I've had very little trouble switching from JM to Jag. Only on a couple songs where I have to move very quickly from one end of the neck to the other do I find the JM a little easier - bigger target.

Danny Snyder

"With great reverb comes great responsibility" - Uncle Leo

Playing keys and guitar with Combo Tezeta

Formerly a guitarist in The TomorrowMen and Meshugga Beach Party

Latest surf project - Now That's What I Call SURF

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