Hi All,
I have a Saga Cigano GJ-10 Student guitar.
Can someone recommend a good case for international air travel (check in, not carry-on)? Something versatile. I told myself that if I continue to play gypsy jazz after a year, I was going to buy myself a really nice guitar, so I'd like a case that would be useful for whatever I buy in 5 months....)
Thanks!
Comments
I've traveled with a mid value guitar in a gig bag many times on planes. Many times I've been told it has to go underneath (in the belly of the plane with the luggage.
I make a scene, mostly just keep talking, but once going out of Korea, the gestapo was relentless. I finally took it out of the bag hoping that if they'd never seen a Selmac, I could convince them its priceless. It finally worked. I've managed getting it in the overhead every attempt but the price to my dignity has been hard, and I'm convinced they'll fail to give in soon. One TSA guy explained to me how a guitar string could be used to garrot another passenger. He was of course correct. All armed govt. backed paranoids are correct I spose.
On the other hand, the reason I only try flying with a gig bag is three fold:
1. "It won't be safe at all underneath"
2. It stows in every kind of plane easily in the overheads.
3. Most importantly, I've come across 4 instances of people with severe to massive damage when they cased the guitar and had it checked. I don't fly that much at all, so that's a high damage rate in a small sample.
I don't know what pros do? If I had the clout, I'd buy another ticket for the axe next to my seat so I could carry a high class guitar.
There may be a case so phenomenal that a guitar can survive, but my experience suggests that the belly of the plane and the handling involved is too often fatal and one of those instances looked like a fork lift blade went through the case and guitar.
Sorry, I don't know what real musicians do. My guitar travels weren't music related.
http://shoppingcart.djangobooks.com/Ite ... case-black
Not bomb proof like a Calton or a Hofee, but a fraction of the cost and enough protection for most.
Thanks,
Michael
When I fly with my $4000 barault I take the $100 superior hard case and check it in under the plane.
When I fly with my $10,000 barault I take a $15 gig bag.
A soft gig bag is smaller than a case and can usually fit on the overhead lockers on most planes. Nobody will try to convince you to check it in, because it's obvious your instrument would be damaged. Some airbus have a few bigger lockers towards the back of the plane and you try to board towards the front of the queue to make sure you get to those big lockers before they fill up.
I don't let the persons at the check in desk even see it, I check in my backpack and leave the guitar with a friend or in a locker. After I've got my boarding pass, I take my instrument straight to the gate. Walk confidently onto the plane, don't look nervous, and be prepared to lie and say "oh the lady at the check-in desk said to take it on the plane" if you get any questions (I haven't had to lie yet.. )
So far I haven't had any bad experiences - the guys at the check in desk are usually the badass ones that are mean about baggage limits and making sure your carry-on luggage is within size limits. They are trained to sting you, fine you, etc.. and you can argue with them till you're blue in the face it's their way or the highway. The guys at security don't care, that's not their job - they just are looking for dangerous or prohibited items. The guys at the gate are usually too busy getting everyone boarding and making sure the crowd doesn't get impatient and the airlines on-time performance is met. Cabin crew are usually nice and helpful, even clearing a bigger locker for me once - maybe I've been lucky.
Some airlines are very understanding about guitars and will quite happily let you take the instrument on the plane, or suggest for you to do so - I recommend Southwest Airlines and Lufthansa.
I want an AJL flight case...! These look like a strong and high quality case, but they fit the selmer style guitars like a glove, small and thin fitting so easier to fit into an overhead locker like a gig bag. Unfortunately I've been told you can only get them with a guitar.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
I don't know if he makes them himself, but I would find it far more likely that he has a case moulding company produce them. If so, increasing production would be fairly straightforward.
Maybe we should form a pressure group. Or we could ask Michael to go and ask him nicely while we all stand behind supportively.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
Only trouble with using a check bag HD Case...picking up guitar from specialty pickup somewhere in Central USA, I arrived in time to see it come flying through the plastic curtain...missed the baggage rack and went sliding across the floor....strings were down and no damage ...except some major scuffs to the case.
Guess the baggage guy was having a bad day or hated guitars or both....