UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
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My first post on this forum so hello to everyone and thanks for letting me join.
I've been playing acoustic guitar for over 30 years and my good wife is letting me choose my first higher-end guitar for my 50th birthday which is in a couple of months. I'd appreciate some advice about what and where to buy with a budget of around £1k.
I play mostly folk songs, such as Paul Simon, Dylan, Nanci Griffith etc so I'm usually doing some kind of Travis-style fingerpicking. Never plug into an amp but I'm thinking I should get a guitar with a pickup just in case I need it one day.
My current guitar is a cedar-topped dreadnought (Simon & Patrick SP6) so I'm looking at slightly smaller bodied guitars for the new one. After a lot of thought, I have pretty much decided on either a Furch Blue, Yamaha FS5 (available in a few weeks apparently) or the Yamaha FSX5 (would have to wait until Feb at least). Would be very happy to hear any comments or suggestions about these, or any alternatives you think I should consider.
My main question, though, is about setups and UK retailers. I live on a remote island with no easy access to luthiers or guitar techs so I would really like the retailer to do a good setup before shipping it. I know Richard's Guitars promote this but what about the other UK stores? I have actually been offered a discount on the FS5 or FSX5 by PMT because of a previous sale which fell through. So, although they are not available for a while yet, I can get a decent price on these and love the look/sound of them from what I've watched online. I've never really heard of PMT so not sure how reliable they are and if they would do a good setup. Does anyone have experience of them and would you recommend them?
Thanks in advance for any replies.
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FS5 & FG5 are, as far as I can make out, FS3's and FG3's which have been made in China initially but then sent to Hamamatsu in Japan for finishing off/setup instead of just being marketed in Chinese post-production form. Hence the greater cost. This explains why they look virtually identical - mainly they are.
The FG5 is a very nice guitar in my opinion. It is a dreadnought of course (FG = Folk Guitar) as opposed to the smaller FS (Folk Small). The construction is very good. Mine needed only slight fiddling to lower the action at the bridge saddle to make it just right for me. Also brass bridge pins and Monel strings to suit my personal tone taste. It holds its tuning better than my Martin OM28.
Very pleased with it but then I love FG's. Since buying I have also bought the cheaper FG830. Also nice but tone less complex imho.
You would be welcome to try them out but I notice you are in Scotland and I'm in Essex!
Good Luck.
In my experience, Peach guitars are pretty good in doing what you ask before shipping.
However, IMO, nothing beats getting a fine-tuned set-up by a trusted local luthier or technician. I do not know where you are in Scotland but you should find someone not too far away.
I understand you live somewhere remote , so you might not be willing to travel far . Personally , I would not part with a grand for a guitar I had not played first. Also ,setting up a guitar is not too difficult . You don’t need many tools and everything you need to know is on the net.
@sundance Welcome to the forum! Yamahas have a pretty good reputation for out of the box playability unlike, say, Martins where they are kind of renowned for sending them out "roughed in" on the assumption that everyone will get a set up straight away anyway. So if I was you - taking your remoteness into account - and you're going for the Yamaha, I'd be tempted to get the deal from PMT, see if they can do a set up and then see what you get. It's either going to be fine or it's going to be easily fixable and if it's not, it can go back.
Given that you are remote, it certainly would pay dividends to get comfortable with making rudimentary adjustments to the truss rod and saddle rather than having to resort to luthiers for that.
I live on the Isle of Lewis in the Western Isles of Scotland so it's a whole day's journey involving a ferry to get to Inverness where, I am sure, there will be good guitar techs. Mainland trips happen now and again, though, so I would just have to fit a guitar setup around one of those whenever possible. From what you've said, I can totally understand that relying on the retailer to do a setup is probably not recommended so thanks for highlighting that point.
Yes, I should learn to do basic adjustments myself so maybe I'll try this on my old guitar after doing some research. It's never really been setup properly so could probably use some tweaking. I'm not too bad at working with my hands but I just wouldn't want to go straight into experimenting on a brand new £1k guitar for my first attempts!
As for which guitar to choose, I'm really on the fence between the Furch and the Yamaha. I started out with intentions of getting another cedar-topped guitar and I loved the elegant beauty of the Furchs. There's just something about the Yamahas though that makes me think they will suit the sort of folk music I like to play, and maybe having a spruce to complement my existing cedar makes sense. I've looked at so many reviews, videos and forums about these guitars and I'm still undecided!
That's a Scottish in-joke folks. Murdo is a very popular name in those parts, as is Macdonald.
I'm a relative beginner so I'm not after anything fancy with how my guitars are set up so possibly if you want something a bit more specific YMMV, but the service I've had from Richard's has been great.
PM in Execeter ?
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@sundance - as a Furch owner, I reckon you made a good choice, mine came set up by them with a date/name certificate - for me it played superb "out of the box"
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Haven't had time to play it much yet but my initial feeling was that it sounds really great. It didn't feel as buttery smooth to play as I maybe hoped so might need to consider if it needs any tweaking. The action at the 12th fret could possibly be lower, but I haven't measured it yet. Having said that, I definitely noticed the benefit of the wider nut compared to my Simon & Patrick SP6 and found more space for my fretting hand.
Was slightly disappointed not to receive a certificate of authenticity, or any paperwork at all. Is that normal? Managed to find the battery compartment and figure out how to use the tuner on the LR Baggs pickup but would have expected some sort of instructions.
Technically I'm not supposed to play the guitar until mid January when I have a big birthday but might manage to sneak a few minutes now and again while the wife is out
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
I felt it sounded a bit muted, not nearly as resonant as I'd expected. I was also concerned about the saddle being quite low and, worst of all, was getting frequent fret buzzing.
I called Project Music, followed their advice about adding relief via truss rod adjustments, but couldn't get rid of the buzzing or the muted sound. I also found out from the serial number that the guitar was built in April 2020 so I did wonder where it had been for the last 20 months.
Eventually I wasn't really satisfied with the guitar or the service from the retailer so I decided to return it.
I then called Richard's Guitars and spoke with Richard himself who was extremely helpful. He reassured me that Furchs should sound amazing if setup correctly and, after checking what they had in stock, suggested sending me a Furch Blue OM CM AND an Eastman E6OM-TC. I will (hopefully) keep one and send the other back.
This is a terrific gesture and I'm really excited about having 2 guitars to compare. I had already been interested in the Eastman so to get the chance to compare with the Furch is great. I am very impressed with the attention to detail shown by Richard's and am confident it will be setup well.
It's a lesson learned. I knew Richard's had a good reputation for quality control and customer service so I should have gone to them first. The sale and return with Project Music has lost us about £90 in shipping costs but obviously I couldn't keep a £1k guitar that I wasn't happy with.
Will hopefully receive the 2 guitars from Richard's within the next week or so and then begins the fun of choosing between them!
that's a real shame, but good to hear you're getting great service from Richard's - the Cedar / Mahog is a great combo on smaller bodies - IMHO anyway (sure someone will disagree...........) Ive never played/heard a thermo top, be interesting to hear your views on the Eastman
Ive got the discontinued OM 33 SR -
https://stageshop.hu/en/acoustic-guitars/furch-guitar/furch-discontinued/furch-om33-sr-acoustic-guitar
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
hey mate - here's what I got with mine - (bit late but hey ho)
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
but wow, to be kept within 35% to 40% humidity - that’s quite low, and pretty difficult to that level of precisiom
I will definitely keep you updated - still waiting to receive the two guitars from Richards. My understanding is that they are currently in the queue for setup in their workshop so it's looking likely that I won't get them until after Christmas. This is fine...yes, I'm impatiently waiting to try them out but I'd rather they were setup properly this time!