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silverman

Active member
Joined
Mar 12, 2018
Messages
43
If only one must remain, who will remain standing?

I bought a cutlass HSS last month, and it has become my holy grail guitar. I've owned a fairly large variety of electrics and nearly all of them have had one nitpick or another. Whether it was weight, fret buzz, fret ends, etc. I always felt like there was something holding me back from loving them. I find no such complaints with my cutlass.

Being new to the world of ebmm, I had no idea that the cutlass wasn't their only s-type of recent times. I've been admiring pics of the silo and really want to try one out! Being that none seem to be in my area, I must instead rely on second hand accounts from fellow EBMM lovers to buttress my imagination. Using my familiar frame of reference - the cutlass, I would love to hear from those blessed enough to own or have tried both how
they stack against each other.
 

kestrou

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2013
Messages
1,773
Location
Danville, IL
Oh come on...

How about Chocolate and Peanut Butter walk into the octagon?

They're different - "better" is a matter of preference - but they're GREAT together! :)

Kevin
 

Fender74

Active member
Joined
Oct 17, 2015
Messages
25
I have ordered and returned 3 silo specials I just couldn’t get into the guitar and I really wanted to like the silo the look great but I found my self struggling to play it making a lot of mistakes I wasn’t making with my other guitars. I bought a valentine took to it right away loved the sound and the way it played and I feel the same way about the cutlass I just bought I don’t know what made the silo so different but it was for me it almost felt like the strings were spaced together a lot closer than the cutlass and my valentine
 

kestrou

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2013
Messages
1,773
Location
Danville, IL
I have ordered and returned 3 silo specials I just couldn’t get into the guitar and I really wanted to like the silo the look great but I found my self struggling to play it making a lot of mistakes I wasn’t making with my other guitars. I bought a valentine took to it right away loved the sound and the way it played and I feel the same way about the cutlass I just bought I don’t know what made the silo so different but it was for me it almost felt like the strings were spaced together a lot closer than the cutlass and my valentine

That’s why Mars makes many flavors of candy bars, and why EBMM makes many favors of guitars - find the one(s) you like! :)

Kevin
 

edhalen

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
1,813
Location
Illinois
I wonder if the reason for that feeling of the strings being too close together is because of the Silo having a smaller neck profile vs the cutlass. The soft V of the Cutlass fills up the hand more than the Silo's neck - if that makes sense.
 

Fender74

Active member
Joined
Oct 17, 2015
Messages
25
I wonder if the reason for that feeling of the strings being too close together is because of the Silo having a smaller neck profile vs the cutlass. The soft V of the Cutlass fills up the hand more than the Silo's neck - if that makes sense.

That could be I never thought about that
 
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