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"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
Of the American acoustic guitar makers, Guild are easily my favourite.
It doesn't have the 'lightness' that my Furch OM35 SR has, rather it's more focused and direct if that makes sense. I owned a martin D16gt which was an OK guitar.
Might be optical illusion in the pics, but the saddle looks pretty low. What is the action like? Could be heading for a neck reset, which would not be overly surprising given age. I have heard they are a nightmare on older Guilds. No idea if that is true or not. Often see these with the bridge shaved first to keep the reset at bay for a while (not the greatest of solutions), but bridge looks full thickness on this.
Measuring the height of the strings from the top, just in front of the bridge gives a good feel of where things are at, half inch being thought of as the optimum. Wouldn't not expect a guitar this age to be right at that height though. As that height reduces, you lose torque to the top, so the tone suffers.
Not sure what you mean about; neck feels quite set. You won't tell anything by feeling the neck.
Could run a straight edge right along the fretboard to the bridge. Although this assumes bridge hasn't been shaved.
Optimum:
Prob needing reset:
Just saying, if you just bought it and it needs a reset, you might want to haggle some money off!!