![]() ![]() ![]() Other installation processes may be required, such as fret work, fitting the neck to the neck pocket, and other instrument setup procedures. This replacement neck is for a Fender or Squier by Fender guitar.īecause Fender genuine replacement necks have not been mounted to guitar bodies, nut slots must be cut by qualified personnel. Fender Baritone Sub-Sonic Telecaster neck features a comfortable Modern C profile, a 9.5'-radius maple fingerboard with 22 medium jumbo frets, and a gloss finish on the back for smooth playability. The nut is pre-slotted with "pilot" string location grooves to make spacing a breeze when performing the final string slot filing, and a satin finish on the back offers smooth playability. And if you're not a member of Fender Play yet, click here for a free trial.Fender Sub-Sonic Baritone Stratocaster Neck, 22 Medium Jumbo Frets, MapleĬrafted at their Ensenada, Mexico, manufacturing facility, this genuine Fender Baritone Sub-Sonic Stratocaster guitar neck will convert your standard scale length guitar into a 27” scale length baritone! Features a comfortable "modern C" profile and 9.5"-radius maple fingerboard with 22 medium jumbo frets. This is in keeping with the style of the original instrument, which said “Fender VI” on its headstock even though it was first billed in the 1961 Fender catalog as simply a “New Fender bass guitar” and as the “Bass VI guitar” and “ Bass VI” in subsequent catalogs throughout the rest of the 1960s and into the 1970s.ĭo you want to learn more about your guitar? Check out these informative videos from Fender Play. More Buying Choices 649. FREE delivery Sun, Jun 4 Or fastest delivery Fri, Jun 2 Only 4 left in stock (more on the way). Fender American Pro II Telecaster Neck, Roasted Maple, Deep C Shape, 22 Narrow Tall Frets 65107 List: 699.99 90 days FREE. ![]() Ive reduced my price from 2500 to 2100 firm. Youll see Mexican models out there for much cheaper, but I seen the USA models sell for 3400. They say “Fender VI” and “Squier VI” on their headstocks, respectively. Results Price and other details may vary based on product size and color. Ad id: 2807228064209422 Views: 30 Price: 2,100.00 In excellent original condition with the original hard shell case. Incidentally, the new Bass VI models don’t say “Bass VI” on the headstock. To reiterate, however, Bass VI models old and new are considered bass guitars and have always been billed as such by Fender. ![]() In the few instances when Fender has offered true baritone electric guitars, they’ve been billed as just that i.e., the Sub-Sonic Baritone Stratocaster of 2000-2002, the Jaguar Baritone Special HH of 2005-2010 and the Blacktop Telecaster Baritone of 2012-present. Although the differences might seem subtle to some, they’re definitely two different kinds of instruments. As Fender has always intended and characterized its Bass VI, the terms “six-string bass guitar” and “baritone guitar” are not interchangeable. So it really isn’t just a matter of semantics. And the converse would be pointlessly impractical - slapping a set of bass strings on a baritone guitar probably isn’t going to work because bass strings will likely be too floppy on a 27”-scale instrument to be of any use, and the tuners would likely be too small to be able to accommodate bass guitar strings anyway. You could use alternate tunings on the Bass VI if you wanted to, but that wouldn’t make it a baritone guitar it’d just be, well, a Bass VI with another tuning. They have a 30” scale length, like most short-scale basses, and they use standard tuning (EADGBE) one octave lower than a guitar. They’re strung with bass strings, albeit a special set made specifically for the model. The current Fender and Squier Bass VI models are considered bass guitars, as was the Fender original. Baritone guitars are sometimes tuned a fifth (ADGCEA) or even a major third lower (CFBbEbGC) than standard guitar tuning. Rather, they’re usually tuned a fourth lower than a guitar (BEADF#B), with the fifth-string E matching the sixth-string low E on a standard guitar. Baritone guitars almost never use standard guitar tuning (EADGBE). They’re strung with guitar strings, and they have a scale length usually somewhere around 27”, which is between the standard scale lengths for a guitar (around 25”) and a bass guitar (usually 34” around 30” for short-scale and 32” for medium-scale models). Crafted at our Ensenada, Mexico, manufacturing facility, this genuine Fender Baritone Sub-Sonic Stratocaster® guitar neck will convert your standard scale length guitar into a 27' scale length baritone Features a comfortable 'modern C' profile and 9.5'-radius maple fingerboard with 22 medium jumbo frets. Then what’s the difference between the Bass VI and a baritone guitar? If it isn’t a semantic matter of two names for the same thing -as some suppose - what distinguishes one from the other?īaritone guitars are considered just that-guitars. ![]()
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