Search results for deep shredder
15,
03:13,
2008-11-25 21:40:16 Description: SSI Model 1200-E Shredder with Hydraulic Ram E-Scrap Demo
This unit is a SSI Model 1200-E slow-speed high-torque shredder with hydraulic ram pak, powered by a 60-hp three-phase, 230/460V 60Hz motor. (More) SSI Model 1200-E Shredder with Hydraulic Ram E-Scrap Demo
This unit is a SSI Model 1200-E slow-speed high-torque shredder with hydraulic ram pak, powered by a 60-hp three-phase, 230/460V 60Hz motor. Twin shafts with 27 - 2" knives on each shaft. Chamber opening is 52"x22". Includes stand, feed hopper (4' x 4' x 5'-7" deep) and controls with E-stop. Excellent for e-waste/e-scrap, tires, rubber, plastics, metals, hard drives, wood products, batteries, 5-gallon metal & plastic buckets. Includes hydraulic Push Ram in the feed hopper powered by hydraulic pak with 5-hp electric motor and Vickers pump. Total footprint is 12' long x 8' wide x 14'-8" tall. Good condition.
http://www.wwrequip.com/equipment/k250208.htm (Less)
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2,
04:43,
2009-11-30 21:34:43 Description: Sheridan Paintbrawl, released in 1998, holds the distinction of being possibly the worst FPS ever created, receiving a 0.7 from IGN and not much better from anyone else. With a team AI with the (More) Sheridan Paintbrawl, released in 1998, holds the distinction of being possibly the worst FPS ever created, receiving a 0.7 from IGN and not much better from anyone else. With a team AI with the combined IQ of 5 and an opposing squad of magic marksmen, the games (a repetitive five maps) were almost impossible to win, requiring the player to know exactly what route to take at exactly what speed and shoot exactly where, with minor variations. The soundtrack, though, is another story "Deep Space ... (Less)
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1,
00:00,
2009-12-27 14:22:14 Description: After being upset by the poor quality of my shredder, I modified it by hooking it directly to a 1200rpm pneumatic drill. The result is a very fast paper shredder that requires you to wear gloves; (More) After being upset by the poor quality of my shredder, I modified it by hooking it directly to a 1200rpm pneumatic drill. The result is a very fast paper shredder that requires you to wear gloves; unless you are fond of deep paper cuts. (Less)
Channel: revver Rate it: Rate:
41,
00:00,
2008-11-18 02:31:20 Description: Want free chess software programs to practice your budding chess skills from the Chess Experts-! How about a free chess software database manager? Playing chess against your computer with free chess (More) Want free chess software programs to practice your budding chess skills from the Chess Experts-! How about a free chess software database manager? Playing chess against your computer with free chess software is a good way to test your skills and practice tactics and strategies, while studying games from the Grandmasters can be a quick road to improvement. Here are meny free chess software downloads that are HIGHLY recommended!like Deep rybka 3 , Deep Junior 10.1,deep Shredder 11 ,Fritz 11,Fritz 10 ,Deep Fritz 10, Fritz 8,Fritz 7,Fritz 6,Fritz 5.32 or training software like MegaDatabase 2008 whith 3.8 milion top GM game , or ChessBase 9 .write at megagenius@hotmail.com (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: Chess
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71,
02:23,
2007-06-15 15:28:30 Description: Are you all ready for this!
All my guitars and amps in one 'Eye-Popping' slideshow for your enjoyment and envy.
I've been painstakingly preparing to record a bunch of songs with (More) Are you all ready for this!
All my guitars and amps in one 'Eye-Popping' slideshow for your enjoyment and envy.
I've been painstakingly preparing to record a bunch of songs with various tunings so I needed to fix up some of my un-maintained guitars because they were out of intonation, adjustment and had some issues that needed tending to before recording with them.
After spending the last 2 weeks overhauling my entire guitar collection, I decided to photograph them all against a green screen. I intended to make a slideshow, but didn't really foresee that I would put so much into it. I got a little carried away, but had a lot of fun perfecting my video editing skills. Below is the history behind my guitar collection followed by a highly detailed explanation of my maintenance regimen for recording or gigging.
Instrument Biography:
#1 Westone Dimension IV Electric
I bought this from Central Music in 1989 when they were still in St. Catharines. It was my second guitar replacing a destroyed HONDO strat copy that my Mom bought for me at RJ's music in Niagara Falls when I was 16.
#1 was the first guitar I played out live with (Aqua duck and Sam's to all you Niagara Regional's) and is really 'Fugly' up close. It has survived some serious torture...the worst being thrown down a flight of stairs (not in a case) when I was still dealing with anger issues. I tune this to Drop C# and it still plays like a beast of true Metal Mayhem.
#2 Ibanez Proline Electric
My old girlfriend Kim bought this for me in 1990 at Ostanek's Music St. Catharines and it became my main guitar as it was in better shape than my Westone and I could solo easier with this one.
This guitar has a replacement tremolo (blocked) because the saddles were worn out and I won it from Ebay cheaper than buying new parts from Hoshino (Ibanez) as they rape you on replacement parts and music stores rarely stock what you need anyway. It is tuned Drop C#. The pickguard is just some mirrored stickers to change the look of it from the old red sticker that used to be on it...as seen in previous pictures on myspace. I will always value the smooth Ebony fingerboard on this guitar.
#3 Ibanez RG 560 Electric
I bought this guitar in 1992 from Ostanek's Music in St. Catharines. I could not believe my eyes seeing it hanging up high on the wall. I was the first to play it as it was just brought in. This guitar is the guitar that has seen the most live and studio action and became the feel and look that I desired in a guitar. It really needs a fret job too, but I'll get to that in good time. The Low-Pro Edge, in my opinion, is the best tremolo to ever exist on a guitar. It holds in tune (E-flat) after going apes on it and it still flutters likes butter.
#4 Carvin AC175 Acoustic/Electric
This guitar was/still is the most expensive instrument I ever purchased Direct from Carvin in 1994. It has a neck-through body with a deep purple glossy finish. It is just a beautiful guitar to look at and hold and a dream to play. It is really thin like an electric and the action is almost as good tuned up to E-flat using D' Addario bronze 80/20 .011 through .052 gauge. I can shred on it or strum folk songs. It's the ultimate in playable guitars. I'd probably buy more Carvin's but they are so expensive.
#5 Fender DG -- 10LM Acoustic
I bought this acoustic dreadnought in 1995 at Murphy's Audio in Niagara Falls to have a guitar to strum acoustically at parties as the Carvin was too thin to project any volume acoustically without using a PA system or amp. This is a lower end model that plays like shit. The action is high and it buzzes still. The intonation is off too and it just isn't worth modifying. You can't perfume shit you know. lol
I am using it for an open string drone guitar in the key of B-flat...like a baritone with a .068 gauge string for the B and I had to file out the nut to handle the girth of the thicker strings. It has a good tone, so I'll keep it around for the time being.
#6 Ibanez RG 550 Electric
I bought this used from a pawn shop in Niagara Falls in 1996 and it was almost as nice to play as my blue RG 560. It is my only maple fingerboard in my collection. The paint job isn't original either...some fool did it with soft paint that dings up real easy. This is now tuned as a B-flat Baritone with the fatter gauge of strings I mentioned above. The trem is in good shape because I merged the best parts from my old Proline edge into this one.
#7 Peavey Tracer Electric
I bought this from Ostanek's Music in 2000 and it was originally glossy black with chips and dings in it. I sanded it down to bare wood and stained it hunter green...with a satin clear coating. This guitar is heavy and well made. I also cut out more of the lower horn to get up to the higher frets, but it still feels a little clunky on the 22nd fret.
The Kahler Spyder Bridge is an excellent bridge comparable with a Floyd Rose or Edge, but the saddles are no longer available and mine is in rough shape. I decided to block this trem so it would stay in tune and forget finding a left-handed whammy bar for it. I tune this Drop-A-flat with the low A-flat being a .068 gauge string. I turn to these home made baritones when I'm frustrated with my 7-strings, as sometimes 7 strings are one too many, but I want the lowness.
#8 ESP H-201 Electric
I bought this at Steve's Music while in Montreal, Quebec on a trip for my Fiance Visa interview in 2001 with Patti. This guitar looks like a dream and plays nice. It doesn't have that heavy wood feel that I prefer like the Ibanez guitars...after doing some research on guitar synths, I realized that this was the most suitable guitar for the Roland GK-3 pickup as it had enough space between the bridge saddles and the bridge pickup. I still kind of regret the synth purchase as it plays absurdly unpredictable even after repeat setups on the guitar and GR-20. You'll never see me live with the Roland or this guitar for that reason...unless I write nursery rhyme simple melodies at grindingly slow tempos. lol
I will try to program my sequencer this way just to see if that is more successful than playing it live.
#9 Ibanez RG 470 Electric
I bought this on Ebay used in 2003 as a backup for my other blue RG. It is a cheaper Korean knockoff of my Japan made RG 560. The tremolo is a lower grade than the low-pro edge. I actually drilled out the screw-in whammy bar socket and replaced it with the 'edge' 'push in style' of tremolo arm sockets because I despise a rattle-y loose sound from the screw in jobs. The playability however is better than the Japan made RG 560 because they revamped the neck to body joint to remove the struggle to nail those last high frets. I actually should swap tremolos with the other laser blue RG and make this my main guitar.
#10 Ibanez RG 7420 Electric
I bought this guitar on Ebay new in 2003 and dremeled out the pickup cavities to house these EMG 707's because they are deeper and longer than any stock guitar pickup for a seven string. They are basically bass humbuckers. I tune this guitar Drop-A-flat because I just can't play a 7-string tuned normal because I am so used to playing my 'fake' baritone tuning. With 7-strings, you are facing a lack of fingers to get all the notes you want to hear minus the ones you don't while chording. The answer is to drop the string and voila! You can play seven string chords without any foul notes slipping in there.
#11 Ibanez RG 7420 Electric
Déjà vu...I bought this guitar on Ebay used in 2003 to use as a backup to my first one above. I also 'dremeled out' the pickup cavities to house the beastly EMG 707 pickups. I tune this guitar Drop-A-flat as well. The only difference besides all the f-in paint chips on this one is I wood blocked the tremolo for tuning stability and proper intonation for recording my heavy riffs...as heard in this slideshow.
#12 Brice V2 6-string Bass Electric
I bought this bass new online from Rondo Music in 2003 because the price was right...$200. I wanted to try and record the bass to my tunes instead of programming on my Boss Dr. 660 drum machine. It is difficult to play this monster and it buzzes like a cheap instrument tends to do. I tune it an octave lower than my 7-string guitars so my fingerings are exactly the same. I only wish my hands were big enough to play this well. I still am debating buying EMG's for this as well because I think the pickups are weak or I might sell this and get a 5-string bass to get my hand around the neck better.
#13 Valencia CG 190CE Nylon String Classical Guitar
I bought this new online at Rondo Music on the same purchase date as the Bass because I'd save on shipping and it was only $100. I couldn't believe an acoustic-electric nylon string classical for one hundred bucks was a steal. You know the "you get what you pay for" theory? Well, its intonation BLOWS and won't hold tuning well and I had to file the nut and sand the saddle down to get the action within a playable tolerance. I'll have to see if I have a use for this in any future recordings...if I don't, it's gone! I don't see the point in having a guitar collection you can't use...right?
#14 Carvin C850 Acoustic/Electric Dreadnought
I bought this guitar direct from Carvin in 2004 as it was the most affordable thing for a Lefty in acoustics. I was debating shelling out $500 more to go to the customs like my purple guitar, but wanted a full-bodied sound and not just another thin-bodied shredder.
This guitar really puts my Fender acoustic to shame on all levels. The intonation is decent (not perfect) and it is very playable. It is harder to riff out on this, so it is more of the strummer for my softer side. I do get up higher on the neck with the very roomy cutaway. It sounds amazing acoustically or through the on-board transducer pickup. Carvin is an amazing company. Well worth the money.
#15 Ibanez Prestige
I bought this guitar used on Ebay in 2006 to be my main Drop-C# guitar. I paid $500 and it came with the Prestige case and all. New, this guitar was pushing $900 so I got a good deal. The tremolo is stellar as it is the improved version of the Low-Pro Edge found on my RG 560. This tremolo is why the guitar costs $300 more than the cheaper models. It's worth it though. The tuning is perfect and the action is wicked! The neck is effortless to the last fret, so I just may write some better solos to make use of that.
That's all I have so far in my collection, other than a parts bin that could almost make another guitar or two. Now onto the meticulously described process of how I got my instruments in shape to be record-worthy...and for some folks new to guitar playing, you will find some good tips and advice in there. All the non-musicians and pros can gloss over the next chapter. haha!
My electric guitar maintenance process was basically this:
Removed the old corroded strings and recycled them
Lemon oiled the neck applied using an old toothbrush (Barry's Tip)
Polished the frets with super-fine steel-wool while covering the fingerboard (Barry's Tip)
Tightened every loose screw on the guitar (my OCD kicked into high gear)
Dismantled the bridge, replacing stripped out parts and thoroughly cleaned with alcohol
Put new strings on and completely setup guitar (see below for details)
Polish the entire guitar and take a picture of it.
The Finer Details:
I Restrung with D'Addario XLS Light top/Heavy Bottom Strings
.010-.013-.017-.030-.042-.052 on my E-flat/drop C# tuned guitars
I used the same as above for my 7-string guitars with the addition of adding an Ernie Ball .068 gauge string for the low B-flat/Drop A-flat tunings (it's just cheaper that way than buying 7-string sets) ...besides I wanted fat momma's for strings for extra heavy tone.
I also made a few 6-string guitars 'Fake' Baritone guitars by stringing the same as the 7-string guitars minus the high E string. That is how I recorded my Low-B songs in the studio before 7-strings became readily available for LEFTYS.
I then adjusted the truss rod and bridge height for optimum action without BUZZ...I hate buzz and I play hard so my action has to be set high.
Then I made sure all frets played without buzzing and didn't fret out on bends or whammy pull ups.
Then I adjusted the pickup heights to give even volume over all the strings and between pickups
Once the strings were stretched out (by pulling hard on them and retuning) I intonated them in the position I'd be recording in (seated)
A few of my guitars tremolos are just so beat-up that they go out of tune when using them floating, so I blocked the tremolo with wood. They are now like fixed bridges with the added fine tuning precision. I removed the springs and claw out of the rear of the tremolo and cut two pieces of hard wood to wedge on either side of the tremolo block. This way you don't have to have strings on it to keep the bridge in place and you can bend notes like a hard tail without going flat on the ringing strings not bent at the same time. Don't get me wrong, I love whammy bar wanking, but not if the guitar tuning gets out of whack. The guitars that are still floating are that way because they held in tune within acceptable tolerances on my tuner when comparing a dive bomb recovery to a whammy bar pull-up.
I should point out a few other tricks that I incorporated into my setups that I feel add to their sound quality: I used foam/sponge under the strings at the headstock end to prevent that horrible high-frequency ring from the headstock section of the strings that would resonate when playing hard and heavy. Next, on the guitars that have floating tremolos, I folded up about 2' of toilet paper and placed it between the tremolo springs and the plastic trem cover. This takes away that other awful high-frequency spring resonation and doesn't hinder the tuning stability. All this extra effort gives me a guitar that can play 'dead-silence' muted chord chops without the computer editing. It also takes away the feedback issues associated with sympathetic vibrations at high-volumes.
I use EMG active pickups exclusively for their quiet performance and added low-frequency clarity. I can also get the cleanest-clean sound out of them as they don't color the tone of my amp with any gain or fuzz. I always wire these pickups myself and have to reverse all the wiring diagrams and pots so my knobs work properly (counter-clockwise for high volume) for me. Some guitars even needed dremeling to remove enough wood to fit them in place. Luckily I'm a handy guy with tools.
As for the (x) in my pickup explanation: that means non-functional. I have no real use for the middle position pickup on any of my electric guitars because they get in my way of picking, so I lower that pickup out of the way. I generally leave a 'dummy' pickup in this position in my conversions to EMG as to not leave a gaping hole behind...seeing as active and passive are not compatible on the same guitar, without going into a separate signal path. There would be no point because the pickup is lowered too far from the strings to have any real affect anyway.
Well, that's pretty much a wrap on what I wanted to explain to the vast unknown public and to my dear musician friends. I'll spare all of us the tedious task of an explanation for my live rig.
Take care of yourself and cherish what you have in life, no matter how little or excessive it is.
Aaron (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: Alesis BBE Behringer Brice Carvin ESP Fender Furman Ibanez Marshall Peavey Rockman Rocktron Roland Valencia Westone
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15,
04:53,
2007-07-21 20:41:22 Description: Chapter 8: Robot Rock
"Thank you for taking down Strong Guy for us. We will take it from here." Said the DJ to the girl with the guitar. Just then two thugs came in. "Take them to (More) Chapter 8: Robot Rock
"Thank you for taking down Strong Guy for us. We will take it from here." Said the DJ to the girl with the guitar. Just then two thugs came in. "Take them to the holding area where the other one is I will meet with you guys soon enough." Ordered the DJ.
Later at the holding area Strong Guy woke up tied to a chair with bent rebar across from the stranger that helped him. He was also awake too.
"Hey kid who are you?" Asked Strong Guy.
"My names Rock. Rock Howard. And you are?" He asked.
"The names Strong Guy. Let me ask you something. Why where you helping me back there?"
"Because one of my friends is here as well. He was going to try and take down Geese but he got caught by a few of his henchmen. So I went in to rescue him but as you can see it did not work out so well. Why are you here?"
"Because Geese put a price on my head for messing up one of his deals. So I came here to settle a score with him." Strong Guy looks around the room is largely dark besides a small overhead light that is lighting where they are sitting. "Where are we anyways?"
"Are you so clueless that you don't know where you are?" Said the voice of the DJ. "Let me put on the light for you." The bright lights came on and Strong Guy and Rock have found themselves on a factory production floor. The DJ is up in a control room looking down at them. "You're deep in the heart of the Howard Syndicate. Oh I almost forgot Rock take a look around the room see anybody else tied to a chair?"
Rock looked around and off in one of the corners was Terry Bogard who was out cold.
"Terry!" Rock Exclaimed.
"Oh yes the KoF master himself Terry Bogard. You know he was snooping around here a few hours ago but I putted an end to that. He will die soon enough from his injury's he's got."
Rock found a way to break the ties off from his chair and Strong Guy broke off the rebar that was keeping his hands together.
"What the hell! You could have broken out at any time?!"
"Yea of course. You guys did not tie the ropes well enough and rebar is easy to brake out of." Strong Guy snarked to the DJ as Rock went to Terry.
"Oh well no matter you are still going to die. For you see this factory is where I make my robots. You have already encountered one of them Strong Guy. Remember Sephiroth? He was one of my best creations I have made and you and that ghetto slang thug friend of yours smashed him easly. I'm still very pissed off about that. No matter I will kill you three my own way."
The DJ types on a computer and the factory comes to life.
"Enjoy your robo death. Hahaha!"
My Thoughts: I'm starting to know off by heart how to pull off two of Strong Guy's specials (Hyper Blanka Envy and Hyper Pinhead) as you can see I'm doing them a lot more often then before from the last videos. Oh yea and this video is showcasing just about all of the robot fighters I got even two rare ones (Shredder and Mech Gouki) and yes I know Metal Mario is not a robot I did not rule out robot looking fighters.
Useless Fun Fact: Two of the fighters in this video Strong Guy vs.'d before when they were the human version of themselves.
Music: Goteki - Like A Robot (Less)
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11,
03:26,
2008-05-07 21:53:53 Description: Jon: What're the top 3 things you're thinking about right now? I wanna know all 3.
Brendon: Alright, I was thinking about that scene in Ninja Turtles 2 Secrets of the Ooze, where (More) Jon: What're the top 3 things you're thinking about right now? I wanna know all 3.
Brendon: Alright, I was thinking about that scene in Ninja Turtles 2 Secrets of the Ooze, where Shredder takes the ooze, and he's like huge & he falls through the thing - YEAH SUPERSHREDDER you know what I'm talking about, yeah! That was #1, #2 & 3 are unimportant, but the 4th thing I was thinking about was playing a song."
"FOLKIN' AROUND"
Brendon to Ryan: "That was some fine percussion playing, boy!"
Jon: "that's the most sentimental video I've ever seen."
Brendon: "Was that going on behind me? Wow. GIVE IT UP! That's awesome. Pretty Flower"
Jon: "What if like a big bee came & landed right on it?"
Brendon: "That's deep thoughts."
Ryan: "Anyway, this next song will ruin all that, because it's not a love song."
(from the show at House of Blues Orlando on 4/24/08) (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: Around At Brendon Disco Folkin Jon Ninja Panic PATD percussion Ross Ryan Smith Spencer the Turtles Urie Walker
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63,
02:23,
2008-04-22 08:56:43 Description: Are you all ready for this! All my guitars and amps in one 'Eye-Popping' slideshow for your enjoyment and envy. I've been painstakingly preparing to record a bunch of songs with (More) Are you all ready for this! All my guitars and amps in one 'Eye-Popping' slideshow for your enjoyment and envy. I've been painstakingly preparing to record a bunch of songs with various tunings so I needed to fix up some of my un-maintained guitars because they were out of intonation, adjustment and had some issues that needed tending to before recording with them. After spending the last 2 weeks overhauling my entire guitar collection, I decided to photograph them all against a green screen. I intended to make a slideshow, but didn't really foresee that I would put so much into it. I got a little carried away, but had a lot of fun perfecting my video editing skills. Below is the history behind my guitar collection followed by a highly detailed explanation of my maintenance regimen for recording or gigging. Instrument Biography: #1 Westone Dimension IV Electric I bought this from Central Music in 1989 when they were still in St. Catharines. It was my second guitar replacing a destroyed HONDO strat copy that my Mom bought for me at RJ's music in Niagara Falls when I was 16. #1 was the first guitar I played out live with (Aqua duck and Sam's to all you Niagara Regional's) and is really 'Fugly' up close. It has survived some serious torture...the worst being thrown down a flight of stairs (not in a case) when I was still dealing with anger issues. I tune this to Drop C# and it still plays like a beast of true Metal Mayhem. #2 Ibanez Proline Electric My old girlfriend Kim bought this for me in 1990 at Ostanek's Music St. Catharines and it became my main guitar as it was in better shape than my Westone and I could solo easier with this one. This guitar has a replacement tremolo (blocked) because the saddles were worn out and I won it from Ebay cheaper than buying new parts from Hoshino (Ibanez) as they rape you on replacement parts and music stores rarely stock what you need anyway. It is tuned Drop C#. The pickguard is just some mirrored stickers to change the look of it from the old red sticker that used to be on it...as seen in previous pictures on myspace. I will always value the smooth Ebony fingerboard on this guitar. #3 Ibanez RG 560 Electric I bought this guitar in 1992 from Ostanek's Music in St. Catharines. I could not believe my eyes seeing it hanging up high on the wall. I was the first to play it as it was just brought in. This guitar is the guitar that has seen the most live and studio action and became the feel and look that I desired in a guitar. It really needs a fret job too, but I'll get to that in good time. The Low-Pro Edge, in my opinion, is the best tremolo to ever exist on a guitar. It holds in tune (E-flat) after going apes on it and it still flutters likes butter. #4 Carvin AC175 Acoustic/Electric This guitar was/still is the most expensive instrument I ever purchased Direct from Carvin in 1994. It has a neck-through body with a deep purple glossy finish. It is just a beautiful guitar to look at and hold and a dream to play. It is really thin like an electric and the action is almost as good tuned up to E-flat using D' Addario bronze 80/20 .011 through .052 gauge. I can shred on it or strum folk songs. It's the ultimate in playable guitars. I'd probably buy more Carvin's but they are so expensive. #5 Fender DG -- 10LM Acoustic I bought this acoustic dreadnought in 1995 at Murphy's Audio in Niagara Falls to have a guitar to strum acoustically at parties as the Carvin was too thin to project any volume acoustically without using a PA system or amp. This is a lower end model that plays like shit. The action is high and it buzzes still. The intonation is off too and it just isn't worth modifying. You can't perfume shit you know. lol I am using it for an open string drone guitar in the key of B-flat...like a baritone with a .068 gauge string for the B and I had to file out the nut to handle the girth of the thicker strings. It has a good tone, so I'll keep it around for the time being. #6 Ibanez RG 550 Electric I bought this used from a pawn shop in Niagara Falls in 1996 and it was almost as nice to play as my blue RG 560. It is my only maple fingerboard in my collection. The paint job isn't original either...some fool did it with soft paint that dings up real easy. This is now tuned as a B-flat Baritone with the fatter gauge of strings I mentioned above. The trem is in good shape because I merged the best parts from my old Proline edge into this one. #7 Peavey Tracer Electric I bought this from Ostanek's Music in 2000 and it was originally glossy black with chips and dings in it. I sanded it down to bare wood and stained it hunter green...with a satin clear coating. This guitar is heavy and well made. I also cut out more of the lower horn to get up to the higher frets, but it still feels a little clunky on the 22nd fret. The Kahler Spyder Bridge is an excellent bridge comparable with a Floyd Rose or Edge, but the saddles are no longer available and mine is in rough shape. I decided to block this trem so it would stay in tune and forget finding a left-handed whammy bar for it. I tune this Drop-A-flat with the low A-flat being a .068 gauge string. I turn to these home made baritones when I'm frustrated with my 7-strings, as sometimes 7 strings are one too many, but I want the lowness. #8 ESP H-201 Electric I bought this at Steve's Music while in Montreal, Quebec on a trip for my Fiance Visa interview in 2001 with Patti. This guitar looks like a dream and plays nice. It doesn't have that heavy wood feel that I prefer like the Ibanez guitars...after doing some research on guitar synths, I realized that this was the most suitable guitar for the Roland GK-3 pickup as it had enough space between the bridge saddles and the bridge pickup. I still kind of regret the synth purchase as it plays absurdly unpredictable even after repeat setups on the guitar and GR-20. You'll never see me live with the Roland or this guitar for that reason...unless I write nursery rhyme simple melodies at grindingly slow tempos. lol I will try to program my sequencer this way just to see if that is more successful than playing it live. #9 Ibanez RG 470 Electric I bought this on Ebay used in 2003 as a backup for my other blue RG. It is a cheaper Korean knockoff of my Japan made RG 560. The tremolo is a lower grade than the low-pro edge. I actually drilled out the screw-in whammy bar socket and replaced it with the 'edge' 'push in style' of tremolo arm sockets because I despise a rattle-y loose sound from the screw in jobs. The playability however is better than the Japan made RG 560 because they revamped the neck to body joint to remove the struggle to nail those last high frets. I actually should swap tremolos with the other laser blue RG and make this my main guitar. #10 Ibanez RG 7420 Electric I bought this guitar on Ebay new in 2003 and dremeled out the pickup cavities to house these EMG 707's because they are deeper and longer than any stock guitar pickup for a seven string. They are basically bass humbuckers. I tune this guitar Drop-A-flat because I just can't play a 7-string tuned normal because I am so used to playing my 'fake' baritone tuning. With 7-strings, you are facing a lack of fingers to get all the notes you want to hear minus the ones you don't while chording. The answer is to drop the string and voila! You can play seven string chords without any foul notes slipping in there. #11 Ibanez RG 7420 Electric Déjà vu...I bought this guitar on Ebay used in 2003 to use as a backup to my first one above. I also 'dremeled out' the pickup cavities to house the beastly EMG 707 pickups. I tune this guitar Drop-A-flat as well. The only difference besides all the f-in paint chips on this one is I wood blocked the tremolo for tuning stability and proper intonation for recording my heavy riffs...as heard in this slideshow. #12 Brice V2 6-string Bass Electric I bought this bass new online from Rondo Music in 2003 because the price was right...$200. I wanted to try and record the bass to my tunes instead of programming on my Boss Dr. 660 drum machine. It is difficult to play this monster and it buzzes like a cheap instrument tends to do. I tune it an octave lower than my 7-string guitars so my fingerings are exactly the same. I only wish my hands were big enough to play this well. I still am debating buying EMG's for this as well because I think the pickups are weak or I might sell this and get a 5-string bass to get my hand around the neck better. #13 Valencia CG 190CE Nylon String Classical Guitar I bought this new online at Rondo Music on the same purchase date as the Bass because I'd save on shipping and it was only $100. I couldn't believe an acoustic-electric nylon string classical for one hundred bucks was a steal. You know the "you get what you pay for" theory? Well, its intonation BLOWS and won't hold tuning well and I had to file the nut and sand the saddle down to get the action within a playable tolerance. I'll have to see if I have a use for this in any future recordings...if I don't, it's gone! I don't see the point in having a guitar collection you can't use...right? #14 Carvin C850 Acoustic/Electric Dreadnought I bought this guitar direct from Carvin in 2004 as it was the most affordable thing for a Lefty in acoustics. I was debating shelling out $500 more to go to the customs like my purple guitar, but wanted a full-bodied sound and not just another thin-bodied shredder. This guitar really puts my Fender acoustic to shame on all levels. The intonation is decent (not perfect) and it is very playable. It is harder to riff out on this, so it is more of the strummer for my softer side. I do get up higher on the neck with the very roomy cutaway. It sounds amazing acoustically or through the on-board transducer pickup. Carvin is an amazing company. Well worth the money. #15 Ibanez Prestige I bought this guitar used on Ebay in 2006 to be my main Drop-C# guitar. I paid $500 and it came with the Prestige case and all. New, this guitar was pushing $900 so I got a good deal. The tremolo is stellar as it is the improved version of the Low-Pro Edge found on my RG 560. This tremolo is why the guitar costs $300 more than the cheaper models. It's worth it though. The tuning is perfect and the action is wicked! The neck is effortless to the last fret, so I just may write some better solos to make use of that. That's all I have so far in my collection, other than a parts bin that could almost make another guitar or two. Now onto the meticulously described process of how I got my instruments in shape to be record-worthy...and for some folks new to guitar playing, you will find some good tips and advice in there. All the non-musicians and pros can gloss over the next chapter. haha! My electric guitar maintenance process was basically this: Removed the old corroded strings and recycled them Lemon oiled the neck applied using an old toothbrush (Barry's Tip) Polished the frets with super-fine steel-wool while covering the fingerboard (Barry's Tip) Tightened every loose screw on the guitar (my OCD kicked into high gear) Dismantled the bridge, replacing stripped out parts and thoroughly cleaned with alcohol Put new strings on and completely setup guitar (see below for details) Polish the entire guitar and take a picture of it. The Finer Details: I Restrung with D'Addario XLS Light top/Heavy Bottom Strings .010-.013-.017-.030-.042-.052 on my E-flat/drop C# tuned guitars I used the same as above for my 7-string guitars with the addition of adding an Ernie Ball .068 gauge string for the low B-flat/Drop A-flat tunings (it's just cheaper that way than buying 7-string sets) ...besides I wanted fat momma's for strings for extra heavy tone. I also made a few 6-string guitars 'Fake' Baritone guitars by stringing the same as the 7-string guitars minus the high E string. That is how I recorded my Low-B songs in the studio before 7-strings became readily available for LEFTYS. I then adjusted the truss rod and bridge height for optimum action without BUZZ...I hate buzz and I play hard so my action has to be set high. Then I made sure all frets played without buzzing and didn't fret out on bends or whammy pull ups. Then I adjusted the pickup heights to give even volume over all the strings and between pickups Once the strings were stretched out (by pulling hard on them and retuning) I intonated them in the position I'd be recording in (seated) A few of my guitars tremolos are just so beat-up that they go out of tune when using them floating, so I blocked the tremolo with wood. They are now like fixed bridges with the added fine tuning precision. I removed the springs and claw out of the rear of the tremolo and cut two pieces of hard wood to wedge on either side of the tremolo block. This way you don't have to have strings on it to keep the bridge in place and you can bend notes like a hard tail without going flat on the ringing strings not bent at the same time. Don't get me wrong, I love whammy bar wanking, but not if the guitar tuning gets out of whack. The guitars that are still floating are that way because they held in tune within acceptable tolerances on my tuner when comparing a dive bomb recovery to a whammy bar pull-up. I should point out a few other tricks that I incorporated into my setups that I feel add to their sound quality: I used foam/sponge under the strings at the headstock end to prevent that horrible high-frequency ring from the headstock section of the strings that would resonate when playing hard and heavy. Next, on the guitars that have floating tremolos, I folded up about 2' of toilet paper and placed it between the tremolo springs and the plastic trem cover. This takes away that other awful high-frequency spring resonation and doesn't hinder the tuning stability. All this extra effort gives me a guitar that can play 'dead-silence' muted chord chops without the computer editing. It also takes away the feedback issues associated with sympathetic vibrations at high-volumes. I use EMG active pickups exclusively for their quiet performance and added low-frequency clarity. I can also get the cleanest-clean sound out of them as they don't color the tone of my amp with any gain or fuzz. I always wire these pickups myself and have to reverse all the wiring diagrams and pots so my knobs work properly (counter-clockwise for high volume) for me. Some guitars even needed dremeling to remove enough wood to fit them in place. Luckily I'm a handy guy with tools. As for the (x) in my pickup explanation: that means non-functional. I have no real use for the middle position pickup on any of my electric guitars because they get in my way of picking, so I lower that pickup out of the way. I generally leave a 'dummy' pickup in this position in my conversions to EMG as to not leave a gaping hole behind...seeing as active and passive are not compatible on the same guitar, without going into a separate signal path. There would be no point because the pickup is lowered too far from the strings to have any real affect anyway. Well, that's pretty much a wrap on what I wanted to explain to the vast unknown public and to my dear musician friends. I'll spare all of us the tedious task of an explanation for my live rig. Take care of yourself and cherish what you have in life, no matter how little or excessive it is. Aaron (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: Alesis BBE Behringer Brice Carvin ESP Fender Furman Ibanez Marshall Peavey Rockman Rocktron Roland Valencia Westone
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2008-04-22 10:37:23 Description: Chapter 8: Robot Rock "Thank you for taking down Strong Guy for us. We will take it from here." Said the DJ to the girl with the guitar. Just then two thugs came in. "Take them to the (More) Chapter 8: Robot Rock "Thank you for taking down Strong Guy for us. We will take it from here." Said the DJ to the girl with the guitar. Just then two thugs came in. "Take them to the holding area where the other one is I will meet with you guys soon enough." Ordered the DJ. Later at the holding area Strong Guy woke up tied to a chair with bent rebar across from the stranger that helped him. He was also awake too. "Hey kid who are you?" Asked Strong Guy. "My names Rock. Rock Howard. And you are?" He asked. "The names Strong Guy. Let me ask you something. Why where you helping me back there?" "Because one of my friends is here as well. He was going to try and take down Geese but he got caught by a few of his henchmen. So I went in to rescue him but as you can see it did not work out so well. Why are you here?" "Because Geese put a price on my head for messing up one of his deals. So I came here to settle a score with him." Strong Guy looks around the room is largely dark besides a small overhead light that is lighting where they are sitting. "Where are we anyways?" "Are you so clueless that you don't know where you are?" Said the voice of the DJ. "Let me put on the light for you." The bright lights came on and Strong Guy and Rock have found themselves on a factory production floor. The DJ is up in a control room looking down at them. "You're deep in the heart of the Howard Syndicate. Oh I almost forgot Rock take a look around the room see anybody else tied to a chair?" Rock looked around and off in one of the corners was Terry Bogard who was out cold. "Terry!" Rock Exclaimed. "Oh yes the KoF master himself Terry Bogard. You know he was snooping around here a few hours ago but I putted an end to that. He will die soon enough from his injury's he's got." Rock found a way to break the ties off from his chair and Strong Guy broke off the rebar that was keeping his hands together. "What the hell! You could have broken out at any time?!" "Yea of course. You guys did not tie the ropes well enough and rebar is easy to brake out of." Strong Guy snarked to the DJ as Rock went to Terry. "Oh well no matter you are still going to die. For you see this factory is where I make my robots. You have already encountered one of them Strong Guy. Remember Sephiroth? He was one of my best creations I have made and you and that ghetto slang thug friend of yours smashed him easly. I'm still very pissed off about that. No matter I will kill you three my own way." The DJ types on a computer and the factory comes to life. "Enjoy your robo death. Hahaha!" My Thoughts: I'm starting to know off by heart how to pull off two of Strong Guy's specials (Hyper Blanka Envy and Hyper Pinhead) as you can see I'm doing them a lot more often then before from the last videos. Oh yea and this video is showcasing just about all of the robot fighters I got even two rare ones (Shredder and Mech Gouki) and yes I know Metal Mario is not a robot I did not rule out robot looking fighters. Useless Fun Fact: Two of the fighters in this video Strong Guy vs.'d before when they were the human version of themselves. Music: Goteki - Like A Robot (Less)
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