pH3ra

joined 3 years ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago (3 children)

In my mind, I've made it abundantly clear what I want.

Every sentence that starts with "in my mind" is not objective, therefore there is no fault in a faulty translation by the interpreter. If you want to be understood, you can either try to be clearer or give up on the responsibility of being understood. And if you give up on that responsibility, you cannot complain about the outcome of said communication.

You're either not paying attention, or not focused on me enough to hear what I'm saying

This is an extremely narcissistic way to view relationships: if I'm not focused on you it means that I
A) have something more important to think about
B) I have not understood the gravity of the situation and that can be corrected
Of course if I think something trivial is more important than you it might be a problem, but this is hardly ever the case

now I'm mad enough that I fear I will start an argument if I need to spell it out again

Not talking about it is a wonderful way to start a bigger, heavier argument later

[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 month ago (6 children)

Me: "Ok I'm listening, what do you want to say?"
Every woman I met in my life: "Nothing..."

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

So it's not just us Italians

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

I mostly watch guitar luthiers on youtube nowadays as a background for when I do stuff like washing dishes and such, so I don't want to listen to people yelling.
My favourite channels are twoodfrd and Doug McCormack for this reason exactly: they're laid back, constructive and polite

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

Go for it as soon as you can gaslight one of your friends into buying a dum kit

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I got it second hand in a pawn shop when I was on vacation in Dublin. It was initially supposed to be just a souvenir, but I kept it as I never had a complaint with it.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 month ago

Wussy just dropped

[–] [email protected] 17 points 1 month ago (2 children)

So the universe is flat, right?

[–] [email protected] 31 points 1 month ago (1 children)

"Baby you're a firework"

 

For my birthday I gifted myself a DIY Pedal Kit: it's a clone of a quite famous effect, can you guess what it is?

 

So, I had this amp lying around in my father's basement for a while now. 13 years to be precise: It was my first practice amp back when I bought my first electric guitar. The circuit wasn't half bad, had a cool gritty marshally sound with an analogical spring reverb, but unfortunately the speaker was trash.
30 watts RMS are hard to handle for an 8 inches cheap speaker, so one morning, after an intense early '00s punk rock rehersal it simply went BZZZZZzzzzzzzzzz..... and it was gone.
And finding a new speaker that wouldn't blow up again, expecially one with such required specifications, was something I couldn't achieve 13 years ago. So eventually I gave up searching for spares and I bought a new amp.

Fast forward to a couple months ago, I need a small practice amp to carry around, now that I have a new band after a log time.
I remembered the existence of this relic from the past, went to my dad's house and I was surprised he didn't throw it away after all of this time.
I started to look for spares immediately and thanks to the power of today's internet, I was able to find that the Celestion TF0818, even tho it's not a speaker intended for guitar amps in the first place, had all the specifications I needed: 8 inches, 8 ohms, able to withstand up to 100 watts of power.
The delivery took a while to get to my house (I ordered it via a local website) but once it arrived I put it straight in.

With new guts, my old friend is back in action: the 0818 has a good response to mid-low frequencies which gives a lovely round and dark tone to the gain channel, while still being able to work with high frequencies due the small sizes.
I'm always happy to bring new life to old music equipment, it reminds us that we don't need the latest gizmos (and create unnecessary waste) if we take care of our stuff. Also, the swap was super easy, no joke I just needed a scewdriver and 10 minutes, so if you have and old amp lying around you could totally give it a shot, the results might surprise you.

 
52
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

This friend was gifted to me by my next door neighbour in 2009, when I was 17 and it has been love ever since.

Today it was it's cleaning day: I cleaned it all up, scraped the gunk from the fretboard and polished the frets with car scratch remover and at the end it came out so fine that made me want to share a picture with the community.

Take care of your instruments and they will last for a long time.

 

Hi everyone who's reading: I'm looking for an overdrive pedal that can go into distortion as well when pushed to high gain (or vice versa). I'm using a TS9 clone now and while I love the sound it provides, it cannot go into full distortion. Is there something that woulf help my needs? Plus point if it's a "budget" one

 
 

Last year I bought an Harley Benton Telecaster and I loved it right away. Today I'm going to make it even better by upgrading its weak spots like the tuners, the electronics and the plastic nut. I'm also going to mod the wiring with a 4-way switch and adding a "pickup in series" mode.
Wish me luck.

 
 

Maybe they keep typing "Erth" and this brings them to the goddamn Triangulum Galaxy or some sht

 
 
47
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Last month a friend of mine gifted me his 1997 Epiphone Les Paul 100. He bought it at a pawn shop 15 years ago, played twice and left it at his parents' house since.
It was all beat up and dusty, the wood was so dry and brittle that when I poured olive oil in the truss rod shaft, it made the sound of someone taking the last sip of soda with a straw.
The stock electronics were really cheap to begin with and all this time made them disgustingly crunchy.

And one of the previous owners swapped the stock knobs with four Strat style tone knobs, which should be enough to be condemned for war crimes and be waterboarded for years.

So I spent the last month rummaging second hand websites and shops for spare parts. The best deal I got was finding these wonderful Tesla Opus-2, humbucker sized P90 pickups that sound wonderful. Even at full price they are crazy value for the money, and I paid a little more than half of it.

I also gave it a new guts transplant with full sized potentiometers, shielding with copper tape and alluminum foil and a different knobs configuration: both volume knobs on top, both tone knobs on bottom. Gibson purists are gonna hate me, but I feel it more natural for me this way.

Unfortunately I got ripped off by the guy who sold me the tuning machine heads, as one was broken (I should have checked better). So for now I kept one of the old ones for the low E string. I wasn't really happy at first but it's slowly growing on me. I might end up keeping it this way.

As for now I'm really pleased with the result: this is the first Les Paul I ever owned and also the first guitar I fully renovated from the ground up.
Giving a second life to this beautiful instrument has been super fun and taught me a lot, so if you have any questions feel free to ask

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