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ideally sit facing a wall 4 to 6 feet away so that you can hear what the guitar sounds like
Take someone else to listen as well.
If possible take a reference guitar that you know you like to compare it with
Then you need a piece that challenges the guitar in your style, this is down to personal preferences. With me it's complex chords with some open strings ringing, and an effort to get lots of extra harmonics joining in. Or solo lines with other strings undamped to see how much the guitar joins in
For some they'll be playing a more damped, percussive style.
Make sure it tunes well too
And a rough idea on the action, relief and if the nut slots are cut properly - if new get them to set it up properly
If it's second hand, find out how to spot faults
I like to get a sense of lightness and response of the top, amount of stiffness. I'm not big on necks, don't really mind shape or size but some people need a specific neck profile or they freak out - I'm looking at you @lovestrat74
Take a good tuner too.
The style is up to you - personally I like playing along to Billy Strings demoing various vintage American acoustics for whatever dealer he does it for, mainly to get a ballpark idea of what sort of midrange I'm looking for.
It's very easy for your ears to get acclimatised to a particular guitar in isolation, perhaps not realising immediately that it really doesn't suit you.
I'd suggest comparing different acoustics, with an open mind and ears as you may be surprised as to which you prefer.
Try to get someone else to play the guitar(s) you like best so you can hear the sound being projected.
If you want one with a pickup, I would try it unplugged before using an amp.
in fact buy 2 - get a plastic one as well
the plastic ones don't all measure the same, calibrate the plastic one against the metal, and also get a feel for the readings on well set-up guitars that you can check for reference. Plastic ones fit in your wallet more easily
the plastic ones have useful stuff on the back too, to help you measure string spacing, etc:
decent brand one costs more:
Personally I'd just string the least favourite ones with alternate tunings
I think recording a guitar tests a very different thing to what your ears pickup, worth doing, but it's a different test
Are you mostly going to play unamplified, at home?