gibson flying v

erm..i tink..

its due to the fact tt its a set neck.

there's no holes on it.

and prolly noone would get a set neck.

unless he plans to glue it to his guitar himself or get a tech.

tts y im not luffing..dun quite get it tho.

and i tink its mean to luff.


to luff at a person's ignorance is quite an arrogance.
 
Uh don't be cruel
'Cause I would never be that cruel to you
Uh no, oh oh, no
Uh don't be cruel
Uh girl, you need to change your attitude
Uh no, oh
Uh don't be cruel
 
fatalscars said:
hey guys can i know where can i get a gibson flying v neck?
the gibson flying v has set-in neck or neck thru construction. set neck is a method of guitar construction that involves joining guitar neck and body, pressing it tightly together using some sort of adhesive. This yields better connection of neck and body and makes sound waves.

advantages:
Typically cited advantages of set-in neck include:
Warmer tone;
Usually better access to top frets in comparsion to Plate bolt-on necks as seen on Fender guitars

disadvantages:
Slightly harder to mass manufacture, much harder to repair / service than bolt-on neck;
No control over neck-to-body angle: changing it requires disassembling instrument and re-glueing the neck by an experienced luthier.

neck thru is a construction that involves extending the piece of wood used for the neck the entire length of the body. The strings, fretboard, pickups and bridge are all mounted on this piece.

and to answer your question about the availability of flying v necks, well i dont think there is any. or at least none that i know of.
 
theres a gibson model LP shape guitar with a flying v neck of some sort.

The dude from stone revival is using one. But not sure what model is that or was it a zhng one. But its pretty interesting looking
 
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