UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
What's Hot
Hi folks.
I've only been playing since January but have progressed reasonably in that time. My "main" guitar is an Epiphone LP Standard, which I love but I recently bought a 1988 Korean Washburn DN12 and have been having a great time playing about with it. Thing is, the action is really high and although my old man has done (what we believe is) all that can be done with it to lower it, I'm finding that playing other acoustics is much easier than my own one...
So... I'm thinking of either selling or trading in the Washburn and getting myself a "better" acoustic as I really want to continue learning both electric and acoustic. Looking at what's around online (new) it seems that around £100-150 can bag a pretty damn good acoustic guitar but I don't know an awful lot about which makes or models to look at. I really like the look of the Epiphone EJ45 and also the Yamaha models around that price mark. I know I could probably just get a setup done, but I'm not sure how much that would improve it and I think I'd rather use that money to put it towards getting a new guitar altogether.
Can anyone offer any advice other than just going to try a few out? A chunky neck is no problem, and the one I have is a full size so that's ok too, I'm really looking for models to look for or avoid and any tips anyone might have on ones they have bought or tried out.
Cheers.
Andy
0 LOL 0 Wow! 0 Wisdom · Share on Twitter
Comments
"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
Definitely worth trying out what ICBM recommends, I had one of those Washburns as my first acoustic and it was surprisingly good.
If you do decide on the upgrade path, I'd heartily recommend a Vintage V300 or 400 (and not just because I use their basses, they're genuinely superb acoustics and the V300 won 'best acoustic under £1000' in one of Guitar magazine's roundups). You'd get either for less than £150, be worth seeking a few out to try though as the finishing can be a bit variable.
I'm probably gonna get shot down here but I recently got an 'APC' EA100. YOu can find them on Amazon. Apparently they are made in Portugal, although whether that is true or just rebadged I donno.
Anyway, it's a very honest guitar (Cheap) but has a solid 2 piece spruce top and laminate sapele sides and back and one piece mahogany neck and a rosewood like fretboard (Blackwood) and has pieces of real cow bone on it, like on the heel. It's pretty good spec for the money and the intonation is spot on and it holds tune. It is complete opposite to dead, it sustains forever, has great harmonics and sounds great, if a little mid rangey but not overly bright ta all.
Also it's thinner than your usual acoustic and deeply contoured in a folk shape, so it's really comfy to play and the best thing is the thin matt water based varnish finish, which feels and looks like bare wood and actually will wash off.
The back binding join isn't great, but like I say, it's honest, it's easy to play, loud enough without a brittle nor too bassy tone and it sustains forever. The action on mine is around 4mm on the 12th fret, not the best, but well playable, although you could get it to 3mm.2mm E to E by shaving the plastic bridge. The frets are also vintage super thin ones as well and well finished, which makes it easier to play as well and the neck is a thin D shape, especially at the nut and feels like bare wood.
The best thing about it is that it doesn't aspire to be anything other than it is, where as I've found the guitars in the £300 new price bracket generally do and are generally tonally darker and not as resonant, albeit their binding is finished well. The tone on this thing just shimmers.
I don't like a low action on an acoustic to be honest, it just doesn't work for me and the problem I have with more expensive guitars, even going for cheap is that tacky gloss finish. I like Charvel necks and Tru Oil type finishes and worn, bare wood Alder bodies on electrics. It's amazing what the look and feel of a guitar can do for you, especially something as immediate as an acoustic.
So I wouldn't write off 'El cheapo' guitars without trying some.
There are some Branded guitars out there that are much more expensive, made in China or Indonesia, well crafted but play and sound like dogs, especially some of the older ones.
I generally don't like Yamaha dreadnoughts, they are heavy, slow, awkward and cumbersome to play with the gloss lacquered finish. The necks don't feel right and the bodies give me bruises and they sound way too dark. They don't scream at me, play me, which after all, if you have something kicking about, especially if you have just gotten into acoustics again, you want.
The tactile bare wood, lightweight nature, ease to play and resonance of this thing just sells itself.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
Auto-Bounce by Tom Salta
Dreamhost Web Hosting
A guy I know just bought one of these... and is raving about it. Looks like amazing value.