an addition to acids' post.
I USED to be pretty anal about this shit.
And as a 35 year piano tuner and 45 year player for my living I have very trained ears. Possibly not quite as good as mutts', I don't know ...... but somewhere in that ballpark.
But I just don't get worked up about it anymore.
A newb is gonna be a newb and an intermediate level player/recordist is gonna be intermediate in skills. That's just how it is.
muttley's trying to save them some money and speed up their learning curve.
I'm not sure they don't end up better if they go ahead and go thru all the mistakes. I think you might learn more and better that way.
I see newbs here all the time that have gotten advice from experienced people and treat it as a hard-fast RULE. Then to them, that becomes the only way to do things with no possibility of anything else having any use at all.
That, in itself, becomes a different kind of handicap.
I said in my original post that I thought that in a studio I wouldn't have as favorable a reaction to the Variax and I'm sure that's the case.
But I have good ears and I heard it myself. In that particular live setting with that particular player, the damned thing was pretty nice and useful.
If I hear it ....... or heard it rather .... then that's the way it was. I don't mis-hear things.
Now, it could very well be that that particular player worked hard on his phrasing and technique and made the thing sound better than most others could.
Regardless, it worked well in that particular setting ...... my ears said so and so that's the way it was. I don't start doubting my ears just because someone comes along and says it couldn't have been that way.
I heard what I heard.
And once again, I'm not really arguing with muttley here ..... I WAY respect his ears and knowledge and we have gone into battle together before about amp modelers vs real amps. I'm not a fan of modelers.
But for playing around and having fun in a studio or on gigs I'd snap up a Variax in a second for a good price.
I like to have fun with sound.
The other day I took my solid body 12-string to a gig and used it. Why? Just for the fuck of it!

It's quite impractical as a gigging guitar and there's a lot of things it can't do and it sounds wrong for a lotta stuff.
It was fun just to try and get around its' limitations and make it sound decent on stuff it shouldn't sound decent on.
And it ended up NOT sounding too good on rock stuff.
Who cares? I like to have fun playing music and when it's not fun I'll quit.
And, for me, part of having fun is trying new shit just for the hell of it.
Why not?
Music isn't, or shouldn't be IMO, too serious of an endevour.