Thanks for the honest review. Once I scrounge up the dough, the Latitude Cardinal in natural finish will definitely be my next guitar purchase! Look forward to your next video!
Nice review, I've always liked the looks of a headless guitar and this one looks pretty good. What model Ibanez is the one you showed at the end? Thanks.
Think they were talking about the hohner headless, they use a double ball system. I have a strandberg and a eart gw2, both use regular strings. Even Keisel uses regular. Most headless companies these days use normal strings
I just got mine today. I’m not sure if they changed the bridge or not but mine has the bridge with the knobs. I got it because I’m going to start taking lessons and wanted something that would be easier to use than my squire strat since I’m a fellow big man. It is totally more comfortable and feels really well made.
The guy saying headless guitars require special strings were thinking of the old 80’s style electric guitars called Steinberger guitars, they required a double ball end string, modern headless guitars do not.
I just ordered this, but had to send it back unfortunately. The tone knob pot and the input jack would cut in and out. Too bad, cause I really liked it otherwise.
You think this could be a good beginners guitars i have one of the cheap beggi ers guitars and the tunning is a pain in the ass never stay in tune and have to tune it everytime i play it
It looks almost exactly like my eart GW2 without the veneer and chrome pickup covers. I love my eart and was thinking of getting another headless. I dropped a set of EMG pickups and changed strings to 8-38 and it's a beast now. Thanks for the review.
Glad you enjoyed the video. I definitely want to check out an EART headless sometime soon. We are so fortunate to have so many good quality guitars at reasonable prices these days!
Lattitude, as well as EarT guitars are killing me because of the lack of trem...for me there are three things that are a must...good intonation, great action (good level, crown and polishing), and a well functioning tremolo...not everyone uses a trem, but I do...it's part of playing cover tunes accurately...or at least in the ballpark of accurate...I know the EarT makes a W1 which has a trem, but, at least for now, is only available in Europe...it was here for a while on Amazon, but showing sold out now, and doesn't even know if it will be available in the future...so that leaves a person with Strandberg or Kiesel choices......which are all over $1k...thanks for the video. oh, editing this in...or a Bootlegger, but the full bodied neck thru headless of theirs is about a grand, too...
Steinberger, maybe? I don't know how the quality of their stuff is these days, but they're coming in closer to Squier prices than what they were back in the day.
Just noticed... do you play lefty as well as righty? Recently watched you review and play a righty Tele. Interesting... AHA! Just noticed that the printing on your tee shirt is mirror-image in today's video. So you're a righty. Never mind.
Good catch. Yeah I play right handed, but actually that was by force. I’m naturally left hand dominant, but my parents couldn’t afford a left handed guitar when I was just starting out, so I had to learn right handed and never switched.
Thanks for the honest review. Once I scrounge up the dough, the Latitude Cardinal in natural finish will definitely be my next guitar purchase! Look forward to your next video!
Awesome! Definitely an amazing guitar especially for the price. Let me know how you like it and thanks so much for watching!
Nice review, I've always liked the looks of a headless guitar and this one looks pretty good. What model Ibanez is the one you showed at the end? Thanks.
Think they were talking about the hohner headless, they use a double ball system. I have a strandberg and a eart gw2, both use regular strings. Even Keisel uses regular. Most headless companies these days use normal strings
Makes sense. If you can’t just walk into the corner guitar store and buy strings it would be a major turnoff for guitar owners.
I just got mine today. I’m not sure if they changed the bridge or not but mine has the bridge with the knobs. I got it because I’m going to start taking lessons and wanted something that would be easier to use than my squire strat since I’m a fellow big man. It is totally more comfortable and feels really well made.
Thankz for tbe re uew. My inly feedback was that the guitar waa barely visible through a good portion of video.
The guy saying headless guitars require special strings were thinking of the old 80’s style electric guitars called Steinberger guitars, they required a double ball end string, modern headless guitars do not.
I just ordered this, but had to send it back unfortunately. The tone knob pot and the input jack would cut in and out. Too bad, cause I really liked it otherwise.
You think this could be a good beginners guitars i have one of the cheap beggi ers guitars and the tunning is a pain in the ass never stay in tune and have to tune it everytime i play it
What model Ibanez was that?
It looks almost exactly like my eart GW2 without the veneer and chrome pickup covers. I love my eart and was thinking of getting another headless. I dropped a set of EMG pickups and changed strings to 8-38 and it's a beast now. Thanks for the review.
Glad you enjoyed the video. I definitely want to check out an EART headless sometime soon. We are so fortunate to have so many good quality guitars at reasonable prices these days!
I'm pretty sure one of the builders from eart left and started latitude. could be wrong though
That would make sense - they're very similar designs and both are high quality. Hope to review a few EART guitars here soon.
@@horizonplays549 that’s correct
Lattitude, as well as EarT guitars are killing me because of the lack of trem...for me there are three things that are a must...good intonation, great action (good level, crown and polishing), and a well functioning tremolo...not everyone uses a trem, but I do...it's part of playing cover tunes accurately...or at least in the ballpark of accurate...I know the EarT makes a W1 which has a trem, but, at least for now, is only available in Europe...it was here for a while on Amazon, but showing sold out now, and doesn't even know if it will be available in the future...so that leaves a person with Strandberg or Kiesel choices......which are all over $1k...thanks for the video. oh, editing this in...or a Bootlegger, but the full bodied neck thru headless of theirs is about a grand, too...
Steinberger, maybe? I don't know how the quality of their stuff is these days, but they're coming in closer to Squier prices than what they were back in the day.
Just noticed... do you play lefty as well as righty? Recently watched you review and play a righty Tele. Interesting... AHA! Just noticed that the printing on your tee shirt is mirror-image in today's video. So you're a righty. Never mind.
Good catch. Yeah I play right handed, but actually that was by force. I’m naturally left hand dominant, but my parents couldn’t afford a left handed guitar when I was just starting out, so I had to learn right handed and never switched.
I got one. It sounds better than my strandberg, which is the high end model btw.
Wow. Very interesting. I’ve had my eye on a Strandberg for a while.
@@geartalk8711 strandberg sounds too bright, and the sustain really sucks due to the neck thru construction and the chembered body.
@@jianhuang0124 do you have the Latitude stock, or made some upgrades? I was going to buy a Strandberg but decided to give this one a shot first.
@@PedroLopez-zz9hb it's all stocked. Only thing is, strandberg gives you the unique endu neck if that's your cup of tea
First of, you need some lessons before buying more stuff, get an acoustic please, that strumming really. Stick to photography I'd say...
Thanks for the tip, but instead I think I’ll keep making videos. I enjoy it.
Rude, man.
lol internet warrior