UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
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New 12 string guitar day. Been hankering for a decent 12 string acoustic for a while and the Guild Chinese built range seemed a good punt for the money. Picked this F1512 up from Peach last week and I’m very pleased with it. Spruce top, Indian rosewood back and sides.
It’s got a nice balance between jangly top end and bass grunt. I struggle playing dreads these days but the jumbo body isn’t too big, “It’s a cannon” as one review said and certainly has lots of volume. The neck is nice and comfy with a decent width nut: I’ve got a Yamaha APX where the strings are too close together for my sausage sized fingers.
Fit and finish are really good with nicely finished frets. Allegedly it’s been set up by Peach… if they have touched it then I’m impressed as it played nicely straight out of the box, it was even in the ballpark of tuned correctly. There’s one tiny blemish in the lacquer on the headstock and the tuners are a wee bit stiff at the mo but I’m hoping they’ll ease with time. There’s nothing that really bothers me otherwise. The soft case is pretty nice too.
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Setup OK?if it needs a few tweaks, don't do it/have it done yet. Let it get used to its new home first
But at nearly $7000 (about £3900) it was crazy dear. That was January 2021. They are now asking $9500 (about £5350) for them, which is ridiculous for any factory guitar, even a Guild.
If it had been a 6-string, I probably would have gritted my teeth and spent the $7000. It was that good.
But a 12-string for me is a part-time instrument. No matter that the F-512 Maple was so incredibly good, it would never have been my #1 instrument, or even my #3. I wasn't going to spend 7 grand on a 4th or 5th guitar. Instead, I spent $2400 on a Cole Clark 12, which was a much more sensible purchase. I would have liked to try a Maton 12 (about the same price) and a good Taylor 12 (a bit more) but couldn't find anything in stock back then other than an Ovation (which was awful), the Cole Clark, and a little 2-Series Taylor (which was pleasant and playable but way too dear for what it was).
The Cole Clark 12 was a good guitar - very bright and trebly but that's what 12-strings are for. It served me well, but after a year or so I reluctantly came to the conclusion that my life-long love affair with 12-strings is over.
I bought my first 12-string , an Eston (rebadged Eko) in my early teens, and replaced it with a Yamaha when I was about 30. For the next 25 years the Yamaha 12 was my main guitar, sometimes my only guitar. But try as I might, I just can't find a way to make a 12 sound good now that I play with my fingers.(And I'm never going back to plectrums.) Truth be told, I haven't been able to find any examples of fingerpicking on a 12 that I like the sound of enough to want to play like that. So I eventually traded the 12 in on yet another 6-string.
If you get half as many years and half as much fun out of your Guild as I got out of my Eston or my Yamaha back when I was a younger man, it will have been worth what you paid for it five times over. Enjoy!
Looking at your picture, the guitar is instantly familiar. The body shape is the same, the headstock shape is identical, and the zero-fret is another hint.
Did yours have the heel-less bolt-on neck joint?