laxu
Rock Star
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I know, you were hoping to get outraged by a John Cordy video, but no!
Y'all have been baited to a discussion thread about V and X shape guitars!
Explorer shapes deserve their own thread, so let's keep this about V and X styles.
The cons of these guitar types are:

The prominent brands for these style of guitars:
Y'all have been baited to a discussion thread about V and X shape guitars!
Explorer shapes deserve their own thread, so let's keep this about V and X styles.
The cons of these guitar types are:
- You bump them into something, you can expect the finish to chip on the sharp wings.
- Cases are massive and you can't just use any old case.
- Playing sitting down on V shapes requires you to use the classical position.
- Some have poor output jack placement. Ideally the jack should be on the longer/left wing rather than where the other controls are. Otherwise it can dig into your leg when sitting down.

The prominent brands for these style of guitars:
- Gibson. Flying V is a classic, but not the most exciting.
- Dean. V in the back, V in the headstock. ML is probably the most well known X shaped model.
- Jackson Randy Rhoads, King V and Warrior. Another set of classics.
- ESP/LTD/Edwards. They've pretty much taken the RR/KV styles and made them a little bit more ergonomic (and legally distinct) on the high frets with the Arrow shape.
- Solar. They have a lot of V and X shape models, but it's a constant struggle between "right specs, wrong finish".
- Ibanez. Ibanez has made some Flying V copies back in the day, and I think the only other V shape is the VBT700. The Destroyer and Xiphos X-shape ranges had more models in them over the years.
- Schecter. Has a few V shape models, but the Schecter headstock is IMO a poor match for the style.
- Kramer. Weirdly makes some cheap-ish V styles nowadays, including a Dave Mustaine signature model.
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