Nothing's written in stone yet, don't fret.
The body shape, p'up type and positioning and the scale length are being revised depending on what fretboard I can find.
Amazed to see such negative feedback on an instrument that someone like Stu Hamm endorses- he's a very competent and experienced musician. Never played one meself tho.
Not sure where you get this from, it's an urban myth - as soon as you put your finger on a fret, the harmonic nodes of the string will shift anyway, if you position the p'up to hit an open string harmonic then you're more likely to end up getting a booming tone when the open string is struck.
The body shape, p'up type and positioning and the scale length are being revised depending on what fretboard I can find.
Amazed to see such negative feedback on an instrument that someone like Stu Hamm endorses- he's a very competent and experienced musician. Never played one meself tho.
Not sure where you get this from, it's an urban myth - as soon as you put your finger on a fret, the harmonic nodes of the string will shift anyway, if you position the p'up to hit an open string harmonic then you're more likely to end up getting a booming tone when the open string is struck.

neck-thru body 4-string in maple and walnut.
As for the electronics, I'm thinking of coil tapping, then running them through SEPERATE volume/tone pots, that way I can be chugging allong with the bridge, and have a LOUD neck pickup ready to flip to and jazz-out 





