sometimes it means "where im from"
Obviously a guitar neck is made out of wood,sometimes even many different wood types.
A guitar neck is usually made from wood, most commonly maple or mahogany. Inside the neck there will be a metal truss rod that stops the wood from bending out of shape.
press down on the neck between the metal pieces hard enough where you touch the wood on the neck.
Mahogany
maple i think
The nut is the block of material (bone, plastic, wood, etc.) found at the top of the neck/fingerboard where the strings go into slots from the tuners, down to the bridge (pins if steel string).
Spruce for the top and maple for the back, sides and neck.
a few ways... neck through is a solid piece of wood and you just put the fretboard on the guitar and strings bolt on or set neck is 2 pieces of wood usually, than a rod going down the neck and than you put a fretboard on top. afterwards you add all the electronics, evenly space the frets, add the tuners and string it up.
Contact doctor Kenneth Wood at the Lake Norman Spine Center at704-660-4750
There's quite a bit of tension in the strings of a guitar. If there is a hidden weakness in the wood the neck might break eventually because of the tension from the strings.
Wood Storks have white feathers and on the edge of their wings their feathers are black. Their neck and head are gray
A bolt on neck can make a guitar have less sustain, or the notes do not ring as long. This is one major argument between Gibson and fender fans. On the upside bolt on necks are easier to adjust and replace and ALOT of people prefer the Fender tone. The main thing with a bolt on neck is to make sure it is firmly mounted. Most use wood screws but if the screws get stripped you might want to talk to a luthier about putting brass inserts into the neck and use machine screws to secure the neck. Added 8/2010 There is a lot to argue about neck mass and contact. However, as I have seen many big manufacturers screw up neck pockets for bolt-on necks. A bolt on neck is only as good as the neck to pocket fit. The tighter the fit the better the transfer of tone and sound. The Key here is, perfect wood to wood contact and using real bolts with threaded inserts. The cheaper wood screws are OK but do not offer consistent tension. Furthermore, many builders leave, paint and paint build up in neck pockets, others using glue have a minimal tolerance of glue spaced between the wood to wood contact. Think of an electrical circuit, if a wire is broken there is no connection. A .0001" separation can cause lose of sustain and tone. The bottom line is, as long as the "Bolt" in is done correctly more tonal quality will be evident then a set (glued in) neck. A neck through with string through is best. If you were a big corporation and saving .25 on each guitar when you make 10,000 guitars a month, don't you think you might have a bigger Christmas bonus?