12 string wider necks
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- 8mileshigh
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12 string wider necks
Is it just me or does anyone else struggle with the wider 660/12 neck? It's probably years of conditioning, but I much prefer the standard width necks.
- jingle_jangle
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A 660/12 was my first Rickenbacker guitar. I enjoyed the wider spacing, and of course the tone is spectacular.
As I play my sixes and other 12s more and more, I find that the neck does feel a bit clunky. However, I have no desire to change guitars or modify my style, and to be fair, I do not need to do either. It's just the sensation of moving back and forth between my other Ricks and the 660/12.
This is most obvious when I switch between my '81 320 and the 660! It's like going from a swizzle stick to a log...
As I play my sixes and other 12s more and more, I find that the neck does feel a bit clunky. However, I have no desire to change guitars or modify my style, and to be fair, I do not need to do either. It's just the sensation of moving back and forth between my other Ricks and the 660/12.
This is most obvious when I switch between my '81 320 and the 660! It's like going from a swizzle stick to a log...
“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
At first I sort of enjoyed my 660 and the wider neck. I guess because it was a different feel from my long owned 360/12, but when grabbing to play a 12 I find myself always going for the 360. Better familiarity breeds comfort.
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Music is too important to be left to professionals.
Music is too important to be left to professionals.
Interesting, Graham. My second Rick was a 660/12 and I bought it because I figured I'd struggle with a narrower 330 or 360 neck.
Because I don't play the 660 all that often I have to spend a lot of time getting comfortable with it. Slipping back to a 1-5/8" 6 string is a breeze afterwards.
Must try out one of the others to confirm my suspicions or otherwise......
Because I don't play the 660 all that often I have to spend a lot of time getting comfortable with it. Slipping back to a 1-5/8" 6 string is a breeze afterwards.
Must try out one of the others to confirm my suspicions or otherwise......
"Never eat more than you can lift." - Mr. Moon
I don't struggle at all with it. In fact I really love it. I also have a '69 LP Deluxe that has a neck like a Redwood trunk compared to the 660, but my other fav, the Godin has a very narrow and thin neck.
My trick: Warm up and stretch with the LP. Move on to the the 660 and finally the Godin. After that, I can move between them quite easily and comfortably. I use this sequence every day for practice, and before every gig.
...Dean
My trick: Warm up and stretch with the LP. Move on to the the 660 and finally the Godin. After that, I can move between them quite easily and comfortably. I use this sequence every day for practice, and before every gig.
...Dean
...Dean
Never, ever drool on your surf shirt. It wrecks the solo.
660/12FG, 350V63/6FG, 620/6JG, 360WB/6DBG, Dingwall C1 #001, Prestige Heritage Elite FM
Never, ever drool on your surf shirt. It wrecks the solo.
660/12FG, 350V63/6FG, 620/6JG, 360WB/6DBG, Dingwall C1 #001, Prestige Heritage Elite FM
- soundmasterg
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- leftyguitars
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I bought a 660/12 blind because I couldn't fit my fingers in on some chords on my 360/12 or 381/12. But even the 660 is too narrow for me to play a "C" chord easily without catching the strings on each side of the "B" strings. I now play a Gibson 12 string which has a neck like a baseball bat, and I get on great with that!
"If only quilted maple grew on trees!"
http://www.leftyguitars.co.uk
http://www.leftyguitars.co.uk
I'm still waiting for my 660-12 BBR to show up (maybe March?). It too was purchased "blind." I have an Ovation 12 and a Guild D55 6, neither of wich are Louisville Sluggers, but certainly fatter than my Gibson SG (or my 360-12). Switching back and forth between these neck widths does take some getting used to, but no different than climbing from my wife's mini-van into my G35 coupe. After a few upshifts, it feels like home.
I'll let y'all know what I think of the 660 when she arrives. With pix, of course!
I'll let y'all know what I think of the 660 when she arrives. With pix, of course!
"It's got to be the going, not the getting there that's good."
- 8mileshigh
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- leftyguitars
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Yes!!!
But then it always is, isn't it?
But then it always is, isn't it?
"If only quilted maple grew on trees!"
http://www.leftyguitars.co.uk
http://www.leftyguitars.co.uk
- firstbassman
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325-at-2pm
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OK, it not just you.
I'm a guitar player and really like playing a 1960s Rickenbacker 12 string guitar more than all the others because for me the smaller more radiused neck is much easier to play.
Several members of this site know me for being a 12 string guy, and I can easily and readily compare several 1960s Ricky 12 string setups to a 660TP, 360V64-12, 1970s 360-12OS, 1960s Burns Double 6, Charvel Surfcaster 12, and a EDS-1275 Gibson 12 string neck. To me, all the others are clunky by comparison, even though I can enjoy them for what they are.
I'm mainly a guitar player, and my primary 6 string guitars are usually Gibsons that have big necks.
There is just some kind of magic with a 1960s Rickenbacker 12 string neck and fingerboard radius. For me it's just so easy and fast to play.
I'm a guitar player and really like playing a 1960s Rickenbacker 12 string guitar more than all the others because for me the smaller more radiused neck is much easier to play.
Several members of this site know me for being a 12 string guy, and I can easily and readily compare several 1960s Ricky 12 string setups to a 660TP, 360V64-12, 1970s 360-12OS, 1960s Burns Double 6, Charvel Surfcaster 12, and a EDS-1275 Gibson 12 string neck. To me, all the others are clunky by comparison, even though I can enjoy them for what they are.
I'm mainly a guitar player, and my primary 6 string guitars are usually Gibsons that have big necks.
There is just some kind of magic with a 1960s Rickenbacker 12 string neck and fingerboard radius. For me it's just so easy and fast to play.



