New 12 string headstock?!?!?
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
- chefothefuture
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 1886
- Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2005 6:00 am
New 12 string headstock?!?!?
YURRRK!
WHY! Is it me, or has anyone else lost their lunch as well
as their wish to buy a 12 with this abomination?
It's an awful day when a beautiful piece of art and engineering
is so destroyed( IMHO).....
WHY! Is it me, or has anyone else lost their lunch as well
as their wish to buy a 12 with this abomination?
It's an awful day when a beautiful piece of art and engineering
is so destroyed( IMHO).....
'68 4001MG, '70 4001 21Fret, '71 4001S MG, '71 4001FG, '72 4001AZ, '73 4001FG, '73 4001resto, '59 365FG, '96 381/12v69FG, '71 4001 21Fret FG
Yeah, who made that dumb decision?
I bet there was a mad rush of people to cancel their orders leaving the warehouse overflowing with 12 string guitars, right next to their abundant stock of crazy.
Next thing you know they'll start putting walnut ears on 4003 and 650 Colorado headstocks!
Talk about the inmates running the asylum...
I bet there was a mad rush of people to cancel their orders leaving the warehouse overflowing with 12 string guitars, right next to their abundant stock of crazy.
Next thing you know they'll start putting walnut ears on 4003 and 650 Colorado headstocks!
Talk about the inmates running the asylum...
I'm all for improving a design, regardless of whether it sticks to the "original." That would be like making the new generation Mustang GT with a carburetor and rear drum brakes just to keep it closer to the first generation.
The new headstock might look "different" but it makes sense from a design standpoint.
Now, if we can just do something about Ridiculous R tailpiece...
The new headstock might look "different" but it makes sense from a design standpoint.
Now, if we can just do something about Ridiculous R tailpiece...
"It's got to be the going, not the getting there that's good."
- tony_carey
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--My wife says that it's not a Ric unless it has an R tailpiece, so I suppose that technically, I don't have any!--
So this begs the question: is it still a Ric with her eyes closed?
As an admitted "newbie" to Ric-world, it was the Ric SOUND that made me plunk down my cash. Yes, it's the best looking guitar I own and yes, it makes people go "oooh, ahhh!" when they see it, but I think that's the whole Rick visual. With or without the tailpiece, it's still got all the Ric properties.
The fact that there are other models of Rics without the R (as Tony mentioned) doesn't lessen their "Rick-ed-ness" so to speak.
For me, the ability to change 12 strings quickly and easily is more important than the classic lines of the R tailpiece--though it would not take rocket science for Hall et al to modify the R tailpiece to make restringing an easier process. Just my two cents...
So this begs the question: is it still a Ric with her eyes closed?
As an admitted "newbie" to Ric-world, it was the Ric SOUND that made me plunk down my cash. Yes, it's the best looking guitar I own and yes, it makes people go "oooh, ahhh!" when they see it, but I think that's the whole Rick visual. With or without the tailpiece, it's still got all the Ric properties.
The fact that there are other models of Rics without the R (as Tony mentioned) doesn't lessen their "Rick-ed-ness" so to speak.
For me, the ability to change 12 strings quickly and easily is more important than the classic lines of the R tailpiece--though it would not take rocket science for Hall et al to modify the R tailpiece to make restringing an easier process. Just my two cents...

"It's got to be the going, not the getting there that's good."
Most of the people who have said they don't like it have never actually seen it. Furthermore, most who have seen one of these guitars never noticed the difference, until it was pointed out!
You have to be up close, looking at it dead on to even see the difference.
Anyway, this is a prime example why we really don't like to change ANYTHING, even when we see a dozen ways to improve it.
You have to be up close, looking at it dead on to even see the difference.
Anyway, this is a prime example why we really don't like to change ANYTHING, even when we see a dozen ways to improve it.
- jingle_jangle
- RRF Moderator
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This , as John says, is a minor change visually--very minor. Yet functionally it makes lots of sense.
You new YURKKKers can always choose from decades of vintage 12s with tough-to-restring headstocks anyway.
Obviously, I'm all for it.
You new YURKKKers can always choose from decades of vintage 12s with tough-to-restring headstocks anyway.
Obviously, I'm all for it.
“I say in speeches that a plausible mission of artists is to make people appreciate being alive at least a little bit. I am then asked if I know of any artists who pulled that off. I reply, 'The Beatles did.”
― Kurt Vonnegut
― Kurt Vonnegut
- tony_carey
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I like the new headstock, it is a typical improvement from Ric...a functional improvement, but in a retro kind of way & as such, is just the sort of brilliance that we have come to expect. Having said that, it wouldn't sway me either way to buy one, I would be happy with either headstock.
'Rickenbacker'...what a name! After all these years, it still thrills me.

