Thanks, I appreciate your kind offer. I'm just hoping for an audience that will appreciate and benefit from the channel.
Dirk wrote:Oh and on the video editing front, I personally use the full version of Vegas Pro on Win10.
If you don't need all the high end tools, they make a very reasonable version that will do the basics very well. https://www.vegascreativesoftware.com/us/
Good luck and happy editing.
Dirk
Thanks for the suggestion. I've been wondering about this one:
I've never heard of them before, but it appears to do most of what you'd need.
The key with video editing is comfort with the flow of editing, and of course the ability to output properly formatted output that plays well with YouTube and or Vimeo if you are hosting it there. The better the output, the less the AI will butcher your video during online conversion.
It looks like they have a free trial, so check it out. Vegas does the same.
In the past I've tried the big famous ones, Final Cut Pro and Premiere, and I never enjoyed their workflow.
Guitars are amazing. When a guitarist wakes up on a glorious summer’s day, they simply amble down to the park with an acoustic. Although, the same can’t be said for a drummer who has a 10-piece kit, who has to lurk in their waterlogged basement, battering away in the gloom like Gollum. I looked at a few on https://bestelectricguitars.reviews/bes ... -for-kids/ and I like what I saw. Nice to see that prices are still reasonable so everyone can enjoy this instrument. However, learning on an acoustic tends to strengthen your playing muscles and give you a more solid foundation to build on in the long run. Acoustic guitars require greater finger pressure to reach the fretboard, so it’s sort of like learning to drive a manual-shift car, then moving to an automatic. So start with a simple guitar.
Any Beatles fan, watch "Beatles 3000" on youtube! XD
jps wrote:Regarding compressed wood, check at the heel end of the neck to see if the two acorns nuts on the body end of the rods are the same distance in from the end of the fingerboard. You may need to strengthen the wood there by saturating it with superglue to harden the surfaces the nuts bear on.
You took the words right outta my mouth, er, fingers! That is indeed the factory recommended procedure to solve this problem and it works very well.
jps wrote:Regarding compressed wood, check at the heel end of the neck to see if the two acorns nuts on the body end of the rods are the same distance in from the end of the fingerboard. You may need to strengthen the wood there by saturating it with superglue to harden the surfaces the nuts bear on.
You took the words right outta my mouth, er, fingers! That is indeed the factory recommended procedure to solve this problem and it works very well.
Little things like the type of truss can make a difference on how you adjust the rods.
If I ever get my new Youtube channel going, I have a whole new technique for adjusting vintage Rickenbacker necks and any problematic guitar neck of any brand. Simple and anyone could do it. Now to decide on really good Video editing software that doesn't cost a fortune.
Hi Joey!
Just wanted to ask if you've decided which software to go for. I bet there are many people like me badly in need of your suggestions.
If I can do anything to help your youtube channel to be up and running, please let me know.
I learned a lot on RRF, it is time to give back to the community!
Little things like the type of truss can make a difference on how you adjust the rods.
If I ever get my new Youtube channel going, I have a whole new technique for adjusting vintage Rickenbacker necks and any problematic guitar neck of any brand. Simple and anyone could do it. Now to decide on really good Video editing software that doesn't cost a fortune.
I just tried downloading those (which is the only way I can even attempt to open them) and my Mac won't play them.
Little things like the type of truss can make a difference on how you adjust the rods.
If I ever get my new Youtube channel going, I have a whole new technique for adjusting vintage Rickenbacker necks and any problematic guitar neck of any brand. Simple and anyone could do it. Now to decide on really good Video editing software that doesn't cost a fortune.
I just tried downloading those (which is the only way I can even attempt to open them) and my Mac won't play them.
I converted the videos to mp4 with Movavi for mac. There is a huge watermark on the free version but does the job. Again, thank you Joey!