That's how I see the deviations from the classic shapes. What about you? Love them?View attachment 11449
View attachment 11448
![]()
Tuning at the bridge is certainly a bit of a pain.I think headless designs can look really cool, but I am slowly coming to realize that they have some functional… deviations is a good word; it’s a matter of preference and familiarity whether you’d call them deficiencies. This mainly comes down to string tension and stability at the nut. I love the Kiesel Holdsworth I’ve been playing - comfortable, snappy and articulate - but string bends and whammy stuff feel oddly stiff, range is compromised, and I can hear/feel the ball end creaking around in the nut while I’m fighting that tension. I think I’d prefer a design with no ball end at that end of the string (i.e.properly locked) but even then, absence of the headstock string length is going to have an effect.
Also, tuning at the bridge - at least on this particular guitar - is a bit of a PITA.
I suspect you're right about that. I've played several other headless guitars (going all the way back to the OG Steinberger GL back in the '80s, and it's never caught my attention the way it does on this guitar.I think the other issues might be specific to the Kiesel Holdsworth as I don't notice anything like that on the Skervesen Shoggie 8-string I have or the shit quality Strandberg Boden OS 8 LE I had briefly. The ABM saddles on the Skervesen have the ball ends at the bridge end and the other end just gets clamped and cut off.
The Strandberg shape is nice but that's about where it ends. The original bolt on heel sucks big time, the bridge design is awful with imprecise and cumbersome action adjustment.Headless guitars usually look either metalz or hideous.
But in my eyes, the Strandberg shape is somehow modern instead of metalz, and classy instead of hideous.
Yeah, it still looks ridiculous to guitarists cus it's headless. But forget about that for a second, and if you just consider the design aesthetics, the outline is very balanced.
In comparison...
Larada - looks like two halves of different guitar bodies with entirely different vibes indiscriminately smashed into one.
Vadar - has pointy little arms (metalz) and round butt bottoms (not metalz at all), again a mismatch.
Klein - looks like some aquatic shape--a rudder and a shark fin that combines into a deformed starfish of a body.
Holdsworth - little fat ukulele of a body, might as well be a Steinberger.
Skervesen - METALZ! Anorexic skinny carve lines, spooky skeletal Halloween-y.
GOC - they went for modern + metalz, but just got funny unbalanced body shapes.
comfortable
Heel is good now on the NX lineup, but the saddle design is not great, I agree.The Strandberg shape is nice but that's about where it ends. The original bolt on heel sucks big time, the bridge design is awful with imprecise and cumbersome action adjustment.
The Skervesen Shoggie shape is very close to Strandberg.