Set-thru neck

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Set-thru neck is a method of joining the neck and the body of guitar (or similar stringed instrument), effectively combining bolt-on, set-in and neck-thru methods. It involves:

  • A pocket in the instrument's body for insertion of neck, as in bolt-on method. However, the pocket is much deeper than usual one.
  • Long neck plank, comparable to the scale length, as in neck-thru method.
  • Glueing (setting) the long neck inside the deep pocket, as in set-in method.

The result is usually told to have combined advantages of all these methods, mostly eliminating their disadvantages. Luthiers frequently cite:

  • improved tone and sustain (due to deep insertion and body made of single piece of wood, not laminated as in neck-thru),
  • "warmer" tone (due to set joint)
  • comfortable access to top frets (due to lack of hard heel and bolt plate),
  • better wood stability.

The main disadvantage is relatively complex construction that leads to higher manufacturing and servicing costs. Another cited disadvantage is the inability or relative complexity of adding a double-locking tremolo to the guitar, as the routing for cavities would interfere with deeply set neck.

[edit] Manufacturers

Set-thru necks are relatively uncommon, and few manufacturers produce such neck joints. Sometimes, especially if neck extension inside a body does not fill full scale length, such neck joint is marketed as a extended pocket set-in neck or deep-set neck.

David Thomas McNaught claims to be the first who proposed a modern version of set-thru neck joint. "Set-Thru" is a registered trademark of McNaught Guitars in United States since February 25, 2003.[1]

Despite the trademark, some other companies use the term to describe their products. ESP Guitars offers several models with set-thru necks:

  • ESP MH-1000 DELUXE
  • ESP Alexi Laiho STD
  • LTD DJ-600 (Dan Jacobs signature model)
  • LTD F-500
  • LTD AX-400
  • LTD M-400
  • LTD H-400
  • LTD MH-400
  • LTD MH-400NT

Ed Roman Guitars offers following guitars with "deep-set tenon neck join", which is a version of set-thru neck:

B.C. Rich guitars offer so-called "Invisabolt Technology" since 2006[1], which is effectively also a version of deep-set neck, bolted underneath the pickups. As of 2007, B.C. Rich offers 3 models in SE series with Invisabolt Technology:

  • B.C. Rich I.T. Beast
  • B.C. Rich I.T. Jr. V
  • B.C. Rich I.T. Warlock

As opposed to popular neck-thru design that emphasises that neck is one piece of wood and the body wing are laminated other wood by using transparent or semi-transparent finishes and contrasting woods, there's no such trend for set-thru guitars. Usually, it's hard to determine if the guitar has set-thru neck or neck-thru body judging only the general outlook. B.C. Rich's Invisabolt Technology is notable exception that uses black ("shadow") body and contrasting light neck wood.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Set-thru" neck trademark information, serial number 78014000, registration number 2690889 at US patents office server.
String instrument neck joints
Bolt-on - Set-in - Neck-thru body - Set-thru