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Or Harley Benton for £233 at Thomann UK
I do have a similar price range Guild D240E 6 string that's great for the money so dont see why the F2512 shouldn't be similar quality
I have no experience with 12-strings in that price range, so I'd just look at the usual suspects.
https://www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/234778/the-kitchen-sink-sale
I can't recall the model but it did the job and it would've been inexpensive back then for a 16-year-old who didn't have much brass.
IIRC I ordered it from Bells of London. That takes me back!
FOR:
* Solid and tough. If you can't play a tune on it you can always use it to bridge crevasses and drive your snowmobile over.
* Well-built in its fashion. It will play in tune (by 1970s standards, which admittedly isn't very) and the action won't have moved by more than a fraction of a millimetre in the 50 years i's been standing up to the massive pull of 12 strings.
* Remarkably pleasant tone. Dead but somehow not dead.
* Good for playing late at night and early in the morning without waking up the household.
* Flattering to the player. Listeners close by will notice how smooth your inexpert playing is, with none of those annoying ill-controlled volume and tone variations less-than-expert players make. (Listeners further away won't notice anything bad because they won't be able to hear you.)
* Innovative (and very sensible) heel-less bolt-on neck allows much better upper fret access. (Some models only.)
* Curiously pleasant to play.
AGAINST:
* Heavy
* Quiet. Very little volume.
* Where cheap laminated guitars sound as if they are made of three-ply, an Eko sounds as though it's made out of industrial grade seven-ply. (Probably because it is.)
* Will never be good enough to play Stairway to Heaven on. Jimmy Page used an Eko to record nearly everything he used an acoustic 12 for on the various famous Led Zep albums back in the day. At that stage of his career, Page could afford to buy any guitar in the world, and for that matter ambitious guitar makers used to bail him up after shows and give him their best instruments hoping that he might play one on stage. But he liked the Eko.
* Awful tuners. I think @ICBM said somewhere that you can sort that out by lubricating them. But maybe I misremember. You could always just replace them.
* Overpriced at £270.
DISCLAIMER. My first real guitar was an Eston (rebadged Eko) 12-string. I had that guitar for maybe 15 years before it got stolen. I played an identical one a couple of years back and my memory wasn't playing me false. Yep: they are weird, they are peculiar, they are not half bad and if I see another one I just might buy it.
Always strung to playing pitch & is almost always in tune no matter how long it is left between playing.
Somewhat unique in that was never factory fitted with the distinctive Eko scratchplate.
Is it worth £270 as a guitar, I'd say yes, but is that a fair price today, no not really.
It seems to be very hard to date but I would guess at a late 70s model ( although I don't really know the ko timeline and visual pointers to date the model).
It does seem to be in vgc but my thoughts are no more than £200-£220?
Whatever you do, don't go too far down the list or you will find examples from someone in Twickenham that specialises in Eko 'Rat custom conversions'
Those pics brought back fond memories. Many gigging friends I knew in the late 60s through the 70s had an Eko. They were good dependable guitars.
From the pics, I can't see the model I had, but I relied on it exclusively until I got my first Gibson in the winter of 1979/80.
Luckily, unless they're truly knackered, it's possible to replace the individual gears if simply lubricating them properly doesn't work.
That - and all the other good things about them - said, I think £270 is overpriced even today, but not *that* much. Prices are going up so much across the board that I don't think £250 is excessive for a really good one, and... it's only another twenty quid. There's not much else you can get that's better for less.
"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
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/195100679922?hash=item2d6ce81ef2:g:1Q0AAOSw2pJic5Ec&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAAoFVUgqGiTLdjCCx42LvSFpX5s0xuSuCoKf2BdhM7o8KBnZ1ilNE5pQU2SDL7BUSbC6aYJxgf1aQcYksWul%2BApHwUsWHuPymY8TRPrYjWksN1M58mWblunGIjIq4wxSdGgkhcE8ENdBoiyYAAxlTOT0ae4kp0j%2BWefw1HynK%2FAPxNawyKyc%2Bf2rxydv1QLlMalBah8lGF9323qtNlNgYhBZc%3D%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR7LsgpPsYA
Rickenbacker 360/12 but got fed up with restringing & tuning and sold it. He now uses a Digitech 12 string pedal.
You could also use a pitch shifter or chorus. It's not exactly the same but it works.
I have had an EKO 12 it was just a pain so sold it for about £150.
They do a Giltrap signature 12 and a Brett one.
I had the Brett one for a few years, it was excellent.
You may be able to land either for under £300.