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Comments
Little Martin & big baby sound really boxy to me although some like that sound.
GS Mini sounded much more like a larger bodied guitar and I loved my mahogany version. I made the mistake of selling for a bigger body guitar which didn't last long and I now have a Martin 0-15 which I love, but if I didn't the Martin... It'd be a GS Mini. Easy to play, sounded great and the gig bag they come in is really nice too.
Absolutely amazing guitar for the money.
"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
Here's the guts of a NGD thread I did......
"Firstly, the tone and sustain from this guitar, even before I fiddled with the action, were very impressive. For £220 its really very good. The action was high at the nut and the bridge and the neck relief was overly tight and I have made initial adjustments to all three and swapped the cheap plastic bridge pins for some Martin white plastic ones. I think the initial strings are phosphor bronze. The Vintage website doesn't specify.
The top and sides are solid mahogany. Again impressive at this price range. There's no inlays, purfling or rosette to speak of. In fact I suspect the rosette may be a (herring bone pattern) transfer, but I can't be sure. I don't care. You don't particularly notice the lack of purfling etc on an instrument where the body (and neck) are all of the same wood. The bridge and fingerboard are both mahogany too. The nut is narrow, 43mm when I measured it c.f. 44mm on my FG5 and OM28, but the neck is full and definitely feels more of a handful than the other smaller instruments I have tried. I was going off the idea of getting a parlour altogether because of the small necks before I played this.
There are no quiet notes or wolf notes anywhere up to the 5th fret on any of the strings, and that's unusual on any instrument! Beyond the 5th fret all seems well too. Strangely on an instrument with good sustain, harmonics are quite quiet. Perhaps that's just small guitars. I've never had one before. The tone is woody and rounded. Not at all bright but nice. It doesn't need to be made any more woody with ebony pins IMO. Eventually I will try Monel MM12s on it but I have no idea how they will sound. I may change the bridge pins to bone too. The nut has 'Nubone' stamped on it. This is a slightly softer version of Tusq from Graph Tec.
Siting on my sofa, it's very comfortable to play, which is what I wanted. It's slightly bigger than a typical parlour. I compared it with my classical and its very similar, just a little narrower in the upper bout. The machine heads are closed chrome generic ones and are of intermediate quality but seem quite steady and smooth. The head is a pleasant Martinoid shape and there is a very nice pearloid 'Vintage' inlay. All quite understated and pleasant."
My YouTube Channel
I do play with capo's pretty much all the time, up and down the fretboard more than a proverbial whatsit and it does help with both reach, wrist comfort and a high-ish nut
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Good to hear I'm not the only one!
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
I think there's a bargain AC3 in the classifieds that looks brilliant.
She definitely is a sit-n-play guitarist, so it's the body size that's the No1 issue. I suppose a shorter scale may help - I can let her try a Fender Mini Squier Strat, which I think is a couple of inches shorter than standard. I'd always assumed it's harder to adjust.
(Seems her budget does not extend to a GS Mini, unfortunately, and from the thoughts above the Baby and Big Baby are not as well liked.)
Then I got a bargain V300MH. Still got the MH, the spruce was sold.
A/B'd it against a mahogany Martin, was very surprised at just how fractionally better the Martin was, compared to how exponentially better value for money the Vintage was.
"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
Saw that Richtone has a used VEC350 (which I think is the same guitar but with piezo + preamp + cutaway) at £129. That might be Plan B if we like the V300N, but don't like the condition.