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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink 24" Scale Guitars

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Other than jaguars those short strats and Mustangs, are there any other, readily available, electric guitars, with a 24" scale, as standard?

Cheers.

http://soundcloud.com/graham-pike

Found this on Wikipedia:

24 in (610 mm), confusingly called "full scale" in Fender sales literature:
Brian May Red Special
DGW (Durango Guitar Works) All models
Fender Bronco
Fender Jag-Stang
Fender Jaguar
Fender Modern Player Short Scale Stratocaster
Fender Mustang most models, including current production
Fender Most Musicmaster II and Duosonic II
Ibanez ORM1
Vox Mark III (Teardrop)
24.5 in (622 mm):
Mosrite guitars
Paul Reed Smith 245 series guitars
Paul Reed Smith Santana Signature series
24.6 in (625 mm):
Gretsch most electric guitars
24.75 in (629 mm):
Epiphone most electric guitars (including Casino, G-310, G-400)
ESP Maverick now it calls ESP MV
Fender Cyclone
Fender Stratosonic
Fender Tele-Sonic
Gibson most electric guitars (including Les Paul, most Les Paul Juniors, Flying V, Explorer, SG, Firebird, ES-175, ES-330, ES-335)
Gibson ES-150 (original version)
Gibson L-20 Acoustic
Godin most electric guitars
Guild most electric guitars
Ibanez Artcore series

For me, there are four factors to take into consideration when evaluating necks: the scale, the thinness, the width and the radius. If I get it into my head that I only want a 24" scale neck, I tend to overlook those other three crucial factors and have ended up with a neck that's not all that comfortable, but when I keep an open mind, I'm surprised at the number of longer scale necks that are more comfortable to me. My only advice is to look at all 4 of those factors when considering what type of neck.

TomH wrote:

For me, there are four factors to take into consideration when evaluating necks: the scale, the thinness, the width and the radius. If I get it into my head that I only want a 24" scale neck, I tend to overlook those other three crucial factors and have ended up with a neck that's not all that comfortable, but when I keep an open mind, I'm surprised at the number of longer scale necks that are more comfortable to me. My only advice is to look at all 4 of those factors when considering what type of neck.

I think this is great advice.
I see so many of my customers who limit themselves from possible guitars by having a specific wish list. Years ago we knew less, made do and made music with whatever we liked.
I have so many different guitars with different scale lengths and neck shapes that sound amazing but I would have missed some of those if I had just stuck to one set of dimensions.
An open mind is a good thing when it comes to guitars, or so I believe.

FWIW, that's a pretty cool list of short scales though.

Cheers,
Jeff

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

GregEL wrote:

Found this on Wikipedia:

24 in (610 mm), confusingly called "full scale" in Fender sales literature:

24" is absolutely full scale. The internet has persisted a myth that 24" is short scale for some reason. It has a shorter scale length than the 25.5" of the Strat/Jazz/Tele... But take 24.75" as the standard scale length which persists across most other makes and models and you have the Jag and Strat/Tele/Jazz which are both equally .75" away from that standard. So is the Strat/Tele/Jazz long scale? Absolutely not. Both 24" and 25.5" are 'full' scale.

The internet sucks and is full of misinformation. 22.5" is what you would consider 3/4 or a short scale.

JakeDobner wrote:

24" is absolutely full scale. The internet has persisted a myth that 24" is short scale for some reason. It has a shorter scale length than the 25.5" of the Strat/Jazz/Tele... But take 24.75" as the standard scale length which persists across most other makes and models and you have the Jag and Strat/Tele/Jazz which are both equally .75" away from that standard. So is the Strat/Tele/Jazz long scale? Absolutely not. Both 24" and 25.5" are 'full' scale.

Exactly!!!! Preach it, Jake!

Jags aren't short scale! #JagScaleMatters

What he said.
I switch off between several guitars as the need demands and scale length difference of 3/4" is certainly not a consideration.mthepnly thing that matters is how they feel, sound and play. String gauges accommodate the need for specific tension between this and that guitar but recall that length of string behind the bridge and headstock angle contribute to the sensation of string tension.
I didn't even notice tha the Mosrite was a 'short scale' guitar because it feels so long!
I do own one truly small guitar with a very thin, light neck that plays beautifully. Despite being small in body and short of neck, it feels and sounds like a serious instrument because of the details of its craftsmanship. Quality, not category, is what matters in guitars. Each one, even among visually identical axes, can have its own specific character, though this is more apropos to older than newer ones made by CNC machines. Let your ears and hands be the judge, not some marketer's idea of what you want.

Squink Out!

Last edited: Apr 20, 2016 10:12:08

Thanks guys.

The Wiki list is a good one, thanks for posting it.
They forgot the Pawn Shop Super-Sonic.

I wouldn't consider limiting myself to a single scale length but find the 24" scale, really gives a very different sound and of course, feel.

As with most things, I always like to play it for myself.

http://soundcloud.com/graham-pike

Last edited: Apr 20, 2016 13:49:41

JakeDobner wrote:

GregEL wrote:

Found this on Wikipedia:

24 in (610 mm), confusingly called "full scale" in Fender sales literature:

24" is absolutely full scale. The internet has persisted a myth that 24" is short scale for some reason. It has a shorter scale length than the 25.5" of the Strat/Jazz/Tele... But take 24.75" as the standard scale length which persists across most other makes and models and you have the Jag and Strat/Tele/Jazz which are both equally .75" away from that standard. So is the Strat/Tele/Jazz long scale? Absolutely not. Both 24" and 25.5" are 'full' scale.

The internet sucks and is full of misinformation. 22.5" is what you would consider 3/4 or a short scale.

I learned something new today, thanks Jake!

MooreLoud.com - A tribute to Dick Dale. New EP Louder Than Life available on bandcamp and website. Taking guitar lessons from Jimmy Dale.

Thanks for yet another rant about the 24" scale and whether it's full, short or intermediate, Mr Dobner.
I was kind of hoping some folk might put me on to some other "full scale" 24" guitars, I'd not heard of, before.

http://soundcloud.com/graham-pike

List omits the latest production Squier Jagmaster 24" scale. After trying to bond with mine for four years I finally sold it last month, just couldn't get used to the shorter spaces between the frets and I'm more of a "lead" player than "rhythm".

Last edited: Apr 22, 2016 00:54:42

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