eftychia: Kickdrum (bass drum) with sneakers on the side legs (kickdrum)
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[livejournal.com profile] folkmew pointed out that Musician's Friend (a place I bought stuff from last century but whose catalog mailing list I fell off of a while back) is having a "moving to new warehouse" sale. So, of course, there's a whole bunch of stuff there that I've wanted to pick up for a while, at tempting sale prices, that I mostly still can't afford anyhow. (Resist, resist, resist.) But I've had "replace guitar cases" on my to-do list for several years now -- the last time I looked, hard cases worth using were too expensive, and I hadn't bothere looking lately because I haven't had any more extra money at hand than the last time I'd looked. But the case for my main 6-string is missing significant chunks of wood near the edge of the lower bout, and is reinforced with strapping tape under the spraypaint and gaffer's tape over the paint where the strapping tape had started wearing out and the wood had mysteriously vanished -- it may actually have a couple more years left in it thanks to all the gaffer's tape Allon attached to it -- and the 12-string case is, well, toast. The hinges and one or two latches have fallen off, and the plies of the plywood around the bottom curve have separated so that the wood there feels like soggy cardboard. I keep a bungee cord around it to hold it closed.

So it's obviously time for me to look at guitar cases on sale ...

The last time I looked at guitar cases, there weren't three hundred and twenty four models of cases to choose from. Eek! Okay, the number shrinks considerably when you narrow it down to folk guitar cases and cross off the ones that cost a bunch extra for fancy paint jobs. And, importantly, they've gotten a lot cheaper (well, the cheap ones have) than the last time I'd looked ... and they're on sale on top of that. I'm not sure I can really justify spending the money for two right now, but I think I can manage to afford one. Now I just have to sift through all these open browser tabs and pick one. (The two undecided questions: do I want to get a plastic one, lighter and more water resistant (water was what did the bulk of the damage -- maybe all of the non-cosmetic damage -- to the cases I've got), or stick to wood so that I know the lid and bottom will be flat for better stackability and squeezing into car trunks? And do I trust an unfamiliar brand?) This might go faster if I didn't keep going, "ooh, shiny!" at various other things (drum and cymbal mutes on sale -- for thirty bucks I can mute everything but the kick drum and the two smallest Roto-Toms and feel less self-conscious about practicing the drums when neighbours are home ... hey, a mandocello in the scratch-&-dent section -- still too expensive ... whoah, a USB microphone!).

Whatever case I get, I'll have to do something distinctive to it to make it easier to pick out of a pile of cases, at least until I get used to the change. I'm so used to just looking for "the light blue one (now with red tape) and the beat-up brown one" among the jumble of black guitar cases at various events that I'm bound to forget to look for a black one at first.


In other news, the house, which was at 88°F and 60% relative humidity at the hottest part of yesterday, finally cooled a bit overnight and a little more since the rain started: it's all the way down to 85°F and 58% relative humidity. Gee, no wonder I feel sticky. And no wonder Perrine keeps retreating to the coolest patch of floor she can find in the hallway (and glaring at me as though the weather is my fault when I pass by). I'm trying to avoid plugging in the bedroom air conditioner -- I'm still paying for the electricity consumed by space heaters over the winter, and the rates just went up significantly -- but I may have to give in and fire it up for my own sanity.

I don't think the heat is the reason I've been sleeping so poorly -- I'm only managing to stay asleep for 30 to 180 minutes at a time, with 60 to 120 minutes being the usual, and I'm gettin' awfully tired of being tired -- but it probably doesn't help.

There are 3 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] mon462.livejournal.com at 02:51pm on 2007-06-03
Selecting cases is a daunting task now. Just to add to the confusion, you might want to check http://www.music123.com. They currently have several cases on clearance. I've bought from them several times with no problems.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 03:53pm on 2007-06-03
Okay, got a bunch more tabs open now... And, having noticed that some models list dimensions and others don't, I figured I'd better check whether I was looking at the right size.

42.5" L, 4.5" D (incl. strings, bridge), 11.5" UB, 10.5" Waist, 16.125" LB -- and Googling "jumbo dreadnought guitar dimensions", it looks like this is not the dreadnought I'd thought it was, but closer to a Martin Jumbo size. Whoops. Then I found one case manufacturer listing internal dimensions for all their cases, and it looks like my 12-string might fit into a TKL "Dreadnought 6/12 String" or TKL "Small Jumbo" case depending on how much squish there is in the padding, and will have enough room to rattle around a little in a TKL "Premier Jumbo 6/12-String" case. And won't fit any of the TKL molded plastic cases.

Hmm.

I know [livejournal.com profile] maugorn has an ABS case that fits a 12-string. But I'm thinking maybe I should play it safe and narrow my focus to wooden jumbo cases.

What I need is a table (or a database lookup form) where I can put in the model number of my guitar and get a list of cases that'll fit it. Like at auto parts stores, where you flip through the book of light bulbs until you find your make/model/year, and it tells you which bulbs fit which lamps in your car; or some button-cell packages where they list "This is equivalent to Eveready such-and-such, Panasonic somethingorother, Duracell whatsit..." and on down a long list. But I'll probably get away with buying a jumbo case and hoping it's just a little large.
 
posted by [identity profile] mon462.livejournal.com at 04:24pm on 2007-06-03
On Music123 I was able to find a really nice Fullerton ABS case for my Washburn D20. However that guitar does not fit in the Gard softshell case that I just bought (I wanted something lighter than a hardshell). That case just barely fits my Washburn EA-9. It is a well made case, but it's just a little to small for a dreadnought. And the ads are weird. See my earlier post.

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