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I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
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Despite him appearing to be about 12... grrrrr.
I had a lefty one of these (spruce / rosewood) which I'd owned from new in 1977 - but then sold it two years ago when I returned to music making after a 10-year sabbatical and mistakenly thought ukes were going to be my thing! Lovely guitar, something I now regret - double grrrr.
The presenter does look a lot younger than the average policeman!
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
An interesting forum on Nick Drake Guitars is https://www.acousticguitarforum.com/forums/printthread.php?t=102351 . I don't think it makes the matter much clearer -but it does place the M20 (the mahogany version of the F20) as a possibility (e.g. the quote from Richard Thompson saying that he'd only ever seen Nick playing his small-bodied Guild guitar)
Some feel it was most likely a D28, as that's what Five Leaves Left arranger Robert Kirby remembers.
On the other hand, the most Nick Drake-sounding guitar I ever played was a 1962 Levin Goliath. Exactly like, um... this.
https://i.imgur.com/aArJb5D.jpg
Looks a bit like you have 3 feet though
Back in the day I had a bit of a crush on Nick's sister Gabrielle Drake in Space 1999.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
I'm not sure if he played one or not, but it's a good all-rounder IMO.
Having said all that, it is more likely that the main contributors to his distinctive guitar sound were (i) playing style, (ii) using old strings and (iii) use of open tunings (not necessarily in that order) - rather than the guitar itself.
The above link also mentions a nylon-strung guitar.
I really wanted a Martin 00018, like Martin Carthy's - and the F20 was similar. There are also references to Nick Drake with a 00018 - the mystery continues
The F20 is a smaller bodied instrument than a 000-18, the F30 was the one that was closer to the 000-18.