
Audioholic
New member
What is the difference in sound / playability of the carvin c66 models, ct4 or 6, Or the dc 400 guitars?
I can't comment on all of the tonal differences, but I've played several dc's and a couple 5-string Carvin basses and they felt flawless! Played like butter!Audioholic":1bqlhaf8 said:What is the difference in sound / playability of the carvin c66 models, ct4 or 6, Or the dc 400 guitars?
Audioholic":3o51h93h said:What is the difference in sound / playability of the carvin c66 models, ct4 or 6, Or the dc 400 guitars?
muudrock":2pr00hyo said:Audioholic":2pr00hyo said:What is the difference in sound / playability of the carvin c66 models, ct4 or 6, Or the dc 400 guitars?
There are differences, mainly I'm the necks. C66 is 22 fret bolt on, CT4 is set neck 22 fret (available in 24 fret too) and DC series are Neck Thru 24 fret. The neck profile on the CT and DC series is similar while the C66 is a touch thinner front to back. Sound wise, the CT series tend to be warmer sounding with a mid range focus as they are mahogany. C66, being a bolt on has a tighter, snappier sound and the DC series are a good combination of both of those. Nice even sound. The DC and CT are also 25" scale while the bolt ones are 25-1/2".
I currently own all of these models and these are IMO some of the best guitars out there quality and construction wise. Just depends on what you are looking for.
BTW ..Their consistency is awesome from one guitar to the next.
Even Bigger D":ez4creb2 said:Personally, if I had a choice between re-fretting a played out CE24 and buying a Carvin, I'd ship the CE24 off to Best Frets for a stainless steel fret job in a heartbeat.
If you're going to buy a Carvin, I seriously recommend going used. DC series guitars that cost $1500 from Carvin regularly ebay for $700. I wouldn't want to be on the wrong end of that sort of depreciation, but that's just me...
With the DC400 guitar, it looks to have pretty complicated electronics, phase switch, active EQ etc. I wonder how hard it is to swap out pickups in a guitar like that.
threadkiller":2bi0yza4 said:With the DC400 guitar, it looks to have pretty complicated electronics, phase switch, active EQ etc. I wonder how hard it is to swap out pickups in a guitar like that.
YikesI wouldn't know what to do with that many knobs and switches.
Glad too hear all the good reports on Carvin. I agree about the resale, but I'm buying it to play and not to flip. It's going to replace or supplement my ibanez which I've had for over 20 years and still going strong after a refret, but I felt I needed to get another locking trem guitar. Keeping a guitar I like for the long haul is pretty normal for me. If you like to flip, I agree, buy used.
With the DC series, or with neck-through guitars in general, I read that the entire guitar tends to sound like the neck wood which is why I had 2 koa stripes put in the 5pc maple neck. Body is Mahogany. Good idea/bad idea?
Audioholic":3jbq2cdo said:Yeah I could and probably will refret my guitar at some point, but if you factor in SS frets, and probably new pickups, shipping out the guitar etc. I am up there with cost, and am leaning towards just getting a new guitar, and the more the merrier... right...?
dawnofdreamx97":x1w18xlb said:my dc127 is my main guitar, i just ordered the cs624 ---- should be here very soon. I like the set neck tone a little more ( i had a cs6 that i sold for the 24 fret version, otherwise i would have kept it) I preferred the tone of the cs6 as it was a little beefier. But there is something about my dc127 that i keep going back to. I really think that the mahogany neck and body combo sounds excellent in there guitars. Gorgeous guitars, totally custom for you , at a fair price, and best return policy in the business. Swap the pickups if your doing metal stuff, otherwise your good to go...
On neck throughs , though you may want to use a Mahogany or Koa neck since that neck wood will be the main character of the Guitar, and Maple neck throughs can be bright- though peopler who do Metal sometimes like the tight sound of a Maple Neck thru-especially on 7 strings- but Mahogany's ( or Koa ) more versatile IMO on neck throughs.
So on neck through Carvins with the" standard" default wood being Maple and the standard default wood for fingerboard being Ebony you will end up with a fairly bright sounding Guitar- so I usually recommend Mahogany necks on neck through Carvins. No charge for different fingerboard woods etc. And Mahogany and Koa necks are very inexpensive- Koa usually has deeper tone on a neck thru compared to Maple.REMEMBER only talking about neck throughs here.