I know there's another thread on this already out there. I have a similar question. I'm flying from Boston to LA via Virgin America Airlines. What's the best way to bring my guitar. Is it recommended to use a hiscox and check it or a reunion blues bag and try to carry it on? Thanks.
-Max
Comments
In most regional jets the overheads are too narrow for anything bigger than a Baby Taylor, though I've flown an Embraer with enough overhead space for my very large flight case--and a 737 with not nearly enough. It depends on the particular plane's setup and (sometimes) age. But the CRJ-700 I flew a couple months ago--first class!--didn't have even enough overhead space to accept my small 16x13x9" shoulder bag. The nice Delta/ExpressJet crew gate-checked my guitar, which was waiting on the jetway in Pittsburgh. (Coming back on an Airbus was a whole different story. I didn't even have to do the heaving-up myself. First class is something I could get used to, though I suspect I will not always be willing to tolerate what it costs.)
I've gotten similar good treatment from Delta crews since they ate Northwest, even when flying my usual coach/cattle-car class, but one hears stories and learns to plan for worst-case scenarios. And that means not ever traveling with a guitar in a gig bag, no matter what some flying road warriors report.
Anytime you ship anything it can get broken. I've received many a broken guitar in a seemingly undamaged shipping box.
I would take the tension off the strings remove the bridge, in the case of an arch top, pack that in the case pocket , put some fabric between the strings and the top and ship it in a flight case, under the plane. Cold won't really hurt it terribly . If its winter humidify as usual. Just let it warm to room temp at the destination. The worst that will happen is some checking. Which is not a big deal.
A Hiscox,Hoffee or Calton will almost always come through for you.
Nothing can withstand an accident, a forklift rolling over it or something of that nature , but under normal circumstances a flight case is all you need.