Re: Gearhead Thread
Posted: Sat February 24, 2018 1:21 am
now i'm looking at a thin line telecaster

For a beginner like me, any big difference between the Bullet and Affinity series?tragabigzanda wrote:for $300, i'd try to get a good deal on a Champ amp and a Squire guitar.
Thanks for the direction. I just got a great deal on a Pacifica 212 (112v with flamed maple top). So now have $100 left for a practice amp. I'm just using it for playing in my basement and for practice after the kids go to bed. What's quality for practice at low volumes and/or use with a headphone out?mf wrote:IMO $300 is a tricky price point to get both a quality guitar and amp. The trouble with the budget/beginner gear is that it doesn't always play the best and if you are fighting against the instrument then you're less likely to stick with it.
If your budget is fixed, i'd almost recommend spending as much as possible of it on a good guitar and getting by with a cheap practice amp (or phone app) and replacing it down the line when you've got some more cash. Squier is a good place to start especially if you're looking for a strat style-guitar, but i'd maybe steer clear the Bullet and Affinity series if possible. These are beginner instruments and can be good but eventually you are going to outgrow it and want something better. If you can find a regular Squier or maybe a used Classic Vibe or Vintage Modified series in your budget, go for it. Those are all quality instruments and will be a lot better bang for the buck.
Something like this maybe?
https://reverb.com/item/9447892-squier- ... ge-mod-hss
Probably a dumb question, but that is ONLY for headphone use, correct? I'd want an actual amp but with the headphone optiontragabigzanda wrote:Skip the shitty amp and just get this:ItsOkay wrote:Thanks for the direction. I just got a great deal on a Pacifica 212 (112v with flamed maple top). So now have $100 left for a practice amp. I'm just using it for playing in my basement and for practice after the kids go to bed. What's quality for practice at low volumes and/or use with a headphone out?mf wrote:IMO $300 is a tricky price point to get both a quality guitar and amp. The trouble with the budget/beginner gear is that it doesn't always play the best and if you are fighting against the instrument then you're less likely to stick with it.
If your budget is fixed, i'd almost recommend spending as much as possible of it on a good guitar and getting by with a cheap practice amp (or phone app) and replacing it down the line when you've got some more cash. Squier is a good place to start especially if you're looking for a strat style-guitar, but i'd maybe steer clear the Bullet and Affinity series if possible. These are beginner instruments and can be good but eventually you are going to outgrow it and want something better. If you can find a regular Squier or maybe a used Classic Vibe or Vintage Modified series in your budget, go for it. Those are all quality instruments and will be a lot better bang for the buck.
Something like this maybe?
https://reverb.com/item/9447892-squier- ... ge-mod-hss
https://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail ... ee-jam-96k
If you have a Mac with garage band, you should have some decent amp modeling at your fingertips.
tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
Hello Morning
Close Captioned
The Kill
Place/Position
Do You Like Me?
Latest Disgrace
Recap Modotti
Nightshop
Break
Life & Limb
Computer + interface is a great inexpensive setup for practice with headphones, or without if you've got a decent set of speakers. But if you're looking for something more traditional there are a lot of great little modelling combo amps from the last 10 years that you can find used for under $100. I'm assuming the Mustang you mentioned first can be had in that price bracket as well. Those are quality little practice rigs.tragabigzanda wrote:Correct, only for headphone use. But if you're limited to basement use while the kids are trying to sleep, I believe you'd be way happier letting 'er rip in your headphones rather than trying to get any sort of pleasing distortion at an amp volume of 2. But whatever, obviously your call.ItsOkay wrote:Probably a dumb question, but that is ONLY for headphone use, correct? I'd want an actual amp but with the headphone optiontragabigzanda wrote:Skip the shitty amp and just get this:ItsOkay wrote:Thanks for the direction. I just got a great deal on a Pacifica 212 (112v with flamed maple top). So now have $100 left for a practice amp. I'm just using it for playing in my basement and for practice after the kids go to bed. What's quality for practice at low volumes and/or use with a headphone out?mf wrote:IMO $300 is a tricky price point to get both a quality guitar and amp. The trouble with the budget/beginner gear is that it doesn't always play the best and if you are fighting against the instrument then you're less likely to stick with it.
If your budget is fixed, i'd almost recommend spending as much as possible of it on a good guitar and getting by with a cheap practice amp (or phone app) and replacing it down the line when you've got some more cash. Squier is a good place to start especially if you're looking for a strat style-guitar, but i'd maybe steer clear the Bullet and Affinity series if possible. These are beginner instruments and can be good but eventually you are going to outgrow it and want something better. If you can find a regular Squier or maybe a used Classic Vibe or Vintage Modified series in your budget, go for it. Those are all quality instruments and will be a lot better bang for the buck.
Something like this maybe?
https://reverb.com/item/9447892-squier- ... ge-mod-hss
https://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail ... ee-jam-96k
If you have a Mac with garage band, you should have some decent amp modeling at your fingertips.
Haha, thanks for the pro tip!Strat wrote:Man, before I ever got an amp i'd always plug into my stereo receiver. blew a few speakers that way but worked most of the time!