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Black Kelly Owners - In Here Please!

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  • Black Kelly Owners - In Here Please!

    I bought a black Jaskson Kelly back in 1991 from the custom shop. Beautiful guitar! Except for one "minor"(?) issue.

    Starting from the neck, there are 2 faint lines that travel from the neck, down past the bridge throughout the lengh of the guitar. One can clearly see how the body was constructed. The body is not a solid piece of wood. The body is not smooth and if you run your finger along these lines you can feel a lump.

    Here is a picture of what i mean:

    http://rapidshare.de/files/26839828/kelly.jpg.html

    The lines are in yellow.

    When i got the guitar, i did not think twice about it but this is not exactly what i was expecting from the Custom Shop.

    Question: Is your black Kelly also like this? Clearly, this would be a warranty issue and if this is NOT normal, i will be giving Jackson Guitars a phone call.

    Regards to all.
    [sigpic=true][/sigpic]

  • #2
    It's perfectly normal. Doesn't matter whether your guitar is black, white, or polka dots. Over the years, eventually the paint lines on a neck-through guitar will slightly sink into the wood consturction lines, and start to show this. The only neck-throughs that won't eventually show those lines are those that have some sort of wood cap on the top of the body. i.e., Like a transparent finish guitar that has a flamed-maple top.

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    • #3
      Your link isn't working for me.

      I don't have a black Kelly yet but, got a few black production guitars from early 90's and I can see lines like you describe on most of them. i think it is a sealing/ finishing problem that shows up over time as the finish is sucked into the body. I have Gibson Explorer with a very faint line and a Ibanez RG560 with 2 very destinct lines where the body woods attach. i have a Black Charvel 275dlx you can clearly see the Wood Grain texture with the light shining on it. I like it tho- at least i know it was made from real wood.

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      • #4
        Actually, I believe you should be happy about that. It means they didn't put so much paint on the body that it would cause the tone to suffer. Not a defect.
        This electric phase ain't no teenage craze -UFO

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        • #5
          I've got a line like that down the middle of my SG. These days, people pay more for aged paint - you could sell it as a distressed, or road worn Kelly and get twice as much.
          -------------------------
          Blank yo!

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          • #6
            I think a thick coat of paint could do that also. The chunk o paint my son chipped of my RG560 was about 3/16" thick

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Grandturk
              I've got a line like that down the middle of my SG. These days, people pay more for aged paint - you could sell it as a distressed, or road worn Kelly and get twice as much.
              Maybe true in the case of Gibson, but NOT Jackson. To most Jackson players, a beat guitar is a beat guitar, not a vintage treasure.
              Imagine, being able to be magically whisked away to... Delaware. Hi... Im in... Delaware...

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              • #8
                I could also see the neck line on my old '87 black cherry Model 6. I don't remember about my old '88 black cherry Model 5A, but definitely the Model 6.
                I feel my soul go cold... only the dead are smiling.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by RobRR
                  Maybe true in the case of Gibson, but NOT Jackson. To most Jackson players, a beat guitar is a beat guitar, not a vintage treasure.
                  I agree - some guitars look better beat up than others. I think anything with a graphic - like an airbrush graphic such as my Fusion's Bikini Beach or a Pile-of-Skulls - looks better when its in mint condition and freshly polished. I think you can get away with a beat-up stencil graphic like a Rising Sun or a bullseye. The more traditional a guitar looks, the more it can be beat up.
                  -------------------------
                  Blank yo!

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                  • #10
                    Hey Treachery welcome to the JCF! You may want to check my kelly;

                    http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...i%20MMF/12.jpg
                    http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...i%20MMF/13.jpg
                    Check my bands!
                    www.myspace.com/magicktr
                    www.myspace.com/sinif64
                    www.myspace.com/dementiatr

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                    • #11
                      that's called paint shrinkage. totally normal when glue is involved.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by toejam
                        I could also see the neck line on my old '87 black cherry Model 6. I don't remember about my old '88 black cherry Model 5A, but definitely the Model 6.
                        We're talkin' KELLYs you interloper you!










                        J/K
                        "Quiet, numbskulls, I'm broadcasting!" -Moe Howard, "Micro-Phonies" (1945)

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by NextInLine
                          I can see the paint lines only on the back of my kelly. Yours looks like the centerblank is skewed! (J/K)
                          I feel festive all year round. Deal with it.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by RacerX
                            We're talkin' KELLYs you interloper you!










                            J/K
                            Well, I never noticed it on my old black Kelly XLR. I guess because it was a bolt-on. :ROTF:
                            I feel my soul go cold... only the dead are smiling.

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                            • #15
                              I have the same thing with my '85 Rhoads. It was originally all black, now it's beat-to-hell-and-chipped-up and black Too many small stages for too many shows will do that though...
                              ...that the play is the tragedy, "Man"

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