Achtung Chad...Reverend has made your guitar for a Matt West?!?

I read this as Mae West!

maewest.jpg

She would have to have been in her 70's when she recorded that.

If you only need one PU, then only get one PU, there is a difference in the way the strings behave with/without the extra magnetic fields and the way the circuit gets loaded by with/without the other inductor wired in.

Esquire > Telecaster
 
She would have to have been in her 70's when she recorded that.

If you only need one PU, then only get one PU, there is a difference in the way the strings behave with/without the extra magnetic fields and the way the circuit gets loaded by with/without the other inductor wired in.

Esquire > Telecaster
Oh hell, I just realized that Hendrix played on a session for Jane Mansfield, not Mae West. Wrong aging bombshell.
 
My Summer of Love guitar has the reverse headstock (because, Hendrix); I find it a bit confusing at times, for some reason. It is easy to clip the tuner before tuning and to remove it before playing. :embarrassed:

At first, I thought it was a bit confusing, but if you ever owned a Gibson or an acoustic, chances are you already are used to having 3 tuners on that side, so what is 3 more? :grin: Now I get freaked out if I grab a guitar that doesn't have a reverse headstock.
 
The reverse headstock makes the string length on the low strings longer, giving them higher tension and the high strings shorter giving them lower tension. In short, you can drop the low E to D without the string getting rubbery and the higher strings easier to bend.

Plus with the tuners on the bottom side of the neck, you have the perfect spot to put a clip on tuner :grin:
This and everyone at Reverend loves reverse headstocks.
 
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