jazzyvee:
Currently, Schecter seems to have gone the same as ESP and Jackson / Charvel: They all started as small, hip shops that built improved Fender style guitars that caught on, farmed out production models to the Far East, and lost a great deal of cache' vis-a-vis what made them hip to begin with. Of course, none of their current customers (watch MTV) can play anyway, so it hardly matters, but they're great for mass murderers/marketers like Guitar Center, etc. Real big with the tattoo/pierced/bored suburban punks who go to raves in Mom's Suburban.
Angled headstocks are succeptible to breaking off at the head/end of neck/first fret area. It's hard to get enough wood in there while still making a neck that feels right at that spot. Straight necks (Fender-style) rarely break here, as the design allows more beef at this spot. This is why lots of guitars have some variation of a volute at this spot: The diamond shaped heel on the back of Martins, the big, almost scoop-shape
on an EXCEL neck, etc. Any serious guitar repair shop has done lots of amgled-head repairs.
As I've heard Susan speak of before, so much of the Series shape came from them starting out as a repair shop. The point body was originally intended to MAKE you put it on a stand, as it didn't allow you to lean it up against the amp sitting on the floor. That the shape became an icon for many of us was purely accidental.
The laminted headstock was an outgrowth of these same lessons learned in repair: While the many laminations on the front and back of the headstock is one of the coolest things I ever saw, it is this layering that is used to build strength at this traditional weak point. If you look on the back of these necks, the lamination extends back past the first fret to help build this area up.
My SPOILER is an Omega/Series shape, so I've been dreadfully careful as I was warned not to knock the tips off the Omega. I'm sure I could buy an F1x and a SuperFilter for what it would cost to fix that particular train wreck !
I've always used the Schallers and been quite satisfied and secure. Believe me, if it starts to fall, I'll be under it !
J o e y