RIC Acoustics. Do they exist?
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- loverickbass
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I think mine sound like acoustic versions of my electrics. Somehow they have that RIC jangle.
I took a mirror down in the soundhole once and looked at the bracing. They look different than most other guitar bracing. Maybe that makes the differance. Don't know, maybe Dale or Paul wants to comment on this.
Cole
I took a mirror down in the soundhole once and looked at the bracing. They look different than most other guitar bracing. Maybe that makes the differance. Don't know, maybe Dale or Paul wants to comment on this.
Cole
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westtexasrickenbacker
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Here's some nice acoustics as well from a friend and former co-worker (not at RIC)
http://www.ryanguitars.com/
http://www.ryanguitars.com/
"It's not the obscene thick gloss, but how it's applied"
- jingle_jangle
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Eric, those are stunning. The bevelled edge is a technological tour-de-force...
“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
- epitreture
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Why couldn't Rickenbacker move acoustic production to another state where they could afford to hire luthiers who could also afford to live there? Then they could meet demand and begin taking orders again. Not to mention avoid a lot of taxation and environmental regulation.
If there isn't a 12 string Rickenbacker playing at my funeral, I'm leaving.
- jingle_jangle
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I went through a seat of the pants analysis on this a few months ago on this Forum, starting with a state with minimum land and regulatory costs and low payroll for skilled labor.
The numbers do not add up for a startup operation and are difficult to meet even for an already established manufacturer, unless you get into tens of thousands of guitars a year, without incurring a substantial debt load and raising the prices of the line appreciably. The taxation thing is only a small part of a manufacturer~s burden and regulation will become consistently strict in a matter of years across the USA.
The answer, of course, would be to go offshore, which John Hall has sworn never to do.
The numbers do not add up for a startup operation and are difficult to meet even for an already established manufacturer, unless you get into tens of thousands of guitars a year, without incurring a substantial debt load and raising the prices of the line appreciably. The taxation thing is only a small part of a manufacturer~s burden and regulation will become consistently strict in a matter of years across the USA.
The answer, of course, would be to go offshore, which John Hall has sworn never to do.
“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
- epitreture
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- loverickbass
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- epitreture
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- epitreture
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If you cannot afford to make a product that people want, then you have two options. You stop making the product or you move somewhere you CAN afford to make the product. If this means you will be heading overseas where rice is consumed in large quantities, then you pack your chopsticks and go. If, as previously stated, John Hall has vowed not to do this, then John Hall is wrong.
If there isn't a 12 string Rickenbacker playing at my funeral, I'm leaving.
