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paulyc
Well-known member
I don’t remember ever seeing a gasket either
No offense, but any Foci I've owned/played are just OK at best; IMO a step below a Charvel model series. The USA Pacers are supposed to be on level or damn close to a USA Charvel/Jackson from that era. Talking about the beak hs Pacers.In my experience, the quality of those are so hit and miss, that I wouldn't touch it at $1200 IMO. Also, keep in mind that those have vintage frets, if that bothers you. Some times a nice, old MIJ Focus is a better buy.
No offense, but any Foci I've owned/played are just OK at best; IMO a step below a Charvel model series. The USA Pacers are supposed to be on level or damn close to a USA Charvel/Jackson from that era. Talking about the beak hs Pacers.
I've told this story a million times on here over the years, but I'll do it again.. In 1983 into 1984 I was saving as many pennies of my pizza delivery money as I could to buy a Kramer. In the Chicago suburbs, we had barely even heard of Charvels let alone seen one in person, but Kramers were everywhere. I finally saved up the $600 the Kramer was going to cost me at my local store. A friend suggested we go in to downtown Chicago to Guitar Center. At 17, we weren't allowed to go downtown on our own, but we did it anyway.
I walked in to GC with $600 burning a hole in my pocket and the absolute guarantee that I was going to have a brand new Kramer that day and the guys in my band were going to be stoked. No more of me slinging a tobacco sunburst Les Paul Custom looking like I belonged in the Allman Bros or the Marshall Tucker Band. I walk in and the sales guy:
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Dave Anderson from Eric Steel from the infamous old Charvel ad, asks me what I am looking for and I tell him a Kramer. He takes me over to the Kramers and I am playing them and I am stoked. My pocket is on fire with money trying to get into the Guitar Center cash register as quickly as possible. Dave then says "have you ever tried one of these?" and puts a 1984 Charvel San Dimas in my hands.
I had played a dozen or so USA Kramers at my local store over the months while I was saving. My guitar teacher there played one. Within 30 seconds of playing the Charvel, I no longer wanted a Kramer. I played 3 or 4 other Charvels that day and I went home empty handed. I was bummed because the Charvel was going to cost me a full $300 more than the Kramer. Back to delivering pizzas in the ridiculous Illinois winters until I finally saved enough for a Charvel. Dave had taken my number and called me a couple of times to let me know when new shipments had come in. That time when he called me, my boss overheard me talking about it at work later and loaned me the rest of the money I needed and I went down there and bought one the next day. I still have it and have never owned a Kramer to this day.
I do still want a strat head Kramer or beak head one but just never got around to buying one when they were reasonably priced.
LOL not at all! It has had probably 20-25 different pickups in it over the years. Original neck had the pointy headstock snapped off. Lee Garver at GMW grafted on an entire new headstock at the scarf joint and did an amazing job. I have a different neck on it now because I can't stand the neck shape on those old pointies. They feel like a yardstick with frets on it. lol. It was a single hum with a brass trem but it now has a neck single coil and a Floyd Rose. This is my go to, benchmark guitar. I have owned dozens more vintage Charvels over the years and none of them have sounded as good as this one. It's the only Charvel I own anymore.IS it still in one piece?
The 1986 Jackson I lucked into (yep another GC score) for 1100 is the best of the 7-8 80s USA Charvels/Jacksons I've had...it's also the first factory Floyd and Maple neck version...this guitar is ridiculously easy playing, and great sounding. Needs nothing. The Charvel you have from me, that neck is a good bit wider than this 86.I have a maple/maple strat head Kramer neck, no it isn’t for sale. It had a Rockinger locking nut when I got it, now it has a Floyd nut. Nice neck, profile is cool. The best Kramer neck I ever touched were those two left handed maple beak Buddy Blaze Elliot Eastons I messed around on, the next best is a maple beak on a Kramer Classic that I own, which is from back in the day, a three single coil strat with a recessed Floyd, candy red. As good as any Charvel I’ve ever played.
LOL not at all! It has had probably 20-25 different pickups in it over the years. Original neck had the pointy headstock snapped off. Lee Garver at GMW grafted on an entire new headstock at the scarf joint and did an amazing job. I have a different neck on it now because I can't stand the neck shape on those old pointies. They feel like a yardstick with frets on it. lol. It was a single hum with a brass trem but it now has a neck single coil and a Floyd Rose. This is my go to, benchmark guitar. I have owned dozens more vintage Charvels over the years and none of them have sounded as good as this one. It's the only Charvel I own anymore.
So to answer that question, the only original thing on the guitar is the wood of the body and the Charvel neckplate. It has been through it all.
1984. San Dimas made. I had loads of them after from Pre-Pro's to USA Jackson bolt on's but none of them sounded as good as this one. That's probably because everything tone-wise was always dialed in around this guitar.Was this one of the USA ones or was it after the Charvel line was moved overseas to Japan?
Did you find the 08/09 USA neck profile better for you than your 84? Personally, that's the profile that fits my hand best..the 80s versions all varied a bit, but a few were of the wide/flat theme..they were the hardest to adjust to.1984. San Dimas made. I had dozens of them after from Pre-Pro's to USA Jackson bolt on's but none of them sounded as good as this one. That's probably because everything tone-wise was always dialed in around this guitar.
If you were talking about the 08/09 Pro Mod necks, yes. I found that those were the most similar to the "right" neck profile from like the 82 strat head era that I likedDid you find the 08/09 USA neck profile better for you than your 84? Personally, that's the profile that fits my hand best..the 80s versions all varied a bit, but a few were of the wide/flat theme..they were the hardest to adjust to.
There's a certain amount of nostalgia about collecting 80s guitars I think. If all I cared about was playability I wouldn't own anything other than Charvel/Jackson (or Chubtone), and only American at that. But I buy stuff I lusted after as a broke ass teenager living at home and now the shit is out there and I can afford it so...I'd rather have the real deal. Parts guitars are cool, don't get me wrong, I have a bunch, but I also like the real article from time to time.
I love that white one!I love those old Kramers. But the prices are stupid. Unless you need the old school mojo,You can build a comparable guitar for much less. They were nothing more than parts guitars assembled in a factory in NJ back in the day. The newer Pacer with a few upgrades will get you there or buy a Charvel San Dimas.
I built a Kramer Pacer myself. I bought a reissue Kramer Pacer body,a neck plate a nicely specd birdseye maple neck, I had a made in Germany Schaller Floyd Rose. Bought a Duncan JB for the bridge and a Schaller humbucker for the neck. It's an awesome player and my number one for quite a while and I probably have less than $500 in it. I also have a newer pacer, the bengal model which is pretty awesome and they were like 700 new.
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I also built these out of spare parts. I owned many Kramers in the early 2000's when they were cheap. I had so many parts. I had 12 American necks at one point, some never even drilled and a bunch of neck plates with no serial numbers that came from the factory sale.