This is a very special run of instruments with a great history; the Music Zoo exclusive Charvel Custom Shop 160 Year Old Pine San Dimas. This old-growth wood, used for our bodies, is considerably stiffer than new White Pine. It is very light weight and produces a clean, clear tone. It also has a lot of "oomph" with a good amount of lower mid-range that makes the guitar really cut, and rounded out highs that never get too shrill.
Features on the Carbonized Pine San Dimas are a 2-piece pine body, a carbonized 1-piece flamed red maple neck with a San Dimas profile and gunstock oil finish, 25.5" scale length, 1-11/16" nut width, 22 jumbo frets, maple dot inlays, brass side dots, a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails in the neck with a Custom 5 in the bridge, a NOS brass tremolo, brass dome knobs, low friction toggle switch, and Legacy tuners.
Old Growth Pine Body:
The Amoskeag Mill complex was built in the 1840s using native White Pine and other species from the upstream virgin forest. Once cut it was floated down rivers and milled on site to build what became by mid century the largest mill complex in the world. In 1990 the mill closed and stood vacant until purchased and repurposed. In 2008 some of the buildings were deconstructed and the native first-growth white pine beams were transported and stored until the tonewood grade beams were sold in 2010. Instruments produced from this wood include high-end archtop and acoustic guitars, fiddles, mandolins, and the bodies for this run. Although they are titled 160 year-old bodies they are in actuality much older as the wood grew from early colonial times, some dating back as early as 1600 in the natural pre-industrial forest.
Carbonized Maple Neck:
Kiln-drying is an age-old technique used to season wood for use in building instruments, but this new process takes kiln-drying a step further. The wood is essentially cooking in a pressurized kiln in its own moisture and gasses as they escape. Much of the hemi-cellulose is cooked out, similar to what happens as wood ages. Cooked wood resembles 100+ year old wood in this respect. Loss of hemi-cellulose lightens the wood and reduces the damping factor so that it has a crisper, longer ring time, losing more weight than stiffness so that the stiffness to weight ratio is increased. The lignin (glue) undergoes a hardening process, making the wood less flexible. The loss of hemi-cellulose and hardening of lignin collectively increase the stiffness to weight ratio by 15% to 25% depending on species. Most of the cellularly bound water is driven off or combined into larger, more stable molecules. This characteristic makes the wood significantly more stable in use, and locks the moisture content around 10 percent. This means that the wood will not take on moisture nor release moisture during its life, which keeps it from being susceptible to climate and humidity changes as the seasons change or as the guitar travels from city to city. This equals fewer neck adjustments and playing issues over the lifetime of the instrument. The release of this moisture also greatly reduces the weight of the wood, making for lightweight and ultimately more resonant necks.
Due to the scarce supply of the reclaimed Pandora Mill White Pine, it is 1 of only 12 instruments built for this extremely limited series. This shopworn instrument has small impressions in the wood by the knobs and some light pick marks between the pickups. It is otherwise in great shape and ready to shred.
Charvel® and San Dimas® are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation under license to JCMI.
Guaranteed Low Price: