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You will take a big got in resale on that Sigma
Dont worry about it being a copy, most guitars are.
I had a J45 Studio for a spell. It was nice, but the "Studio" does affect the value and resale. And I did feel in the end that I wanted a type of tone more than that neck.
If you really prefer the Sigma, work out a deal on it or find a used one.
It was 200 quid.
Sounds huge, and every frequency is balanced.
Feedback
Sigmas are made in China. If a manufacturer outsources to save labor costs, I'm gonna make sure some of those savings are passed on to me. There's no way a guitar made in China should cost £850, particular given that the value will plummet as soon as it becomes a used instrument.
For a couple hundred pounds more, you could have a real solid-body Martin like a D15 or a studio Gibson, which I would absolutely buy over a Sigma at those respective prices.
To imply that they are not real instruments is the ridiculous bit
For the sub 1k market Far Eastern guitars are not to be overlooked
A D15 is around £1300. Hardly a fair comparison
And a G45 is what it is, a cheap copy of a J that sounds nothing like one
You need to play: an eastman
Strandberg, d'angelico, schecter, modern day bc rich the list goes on.
if you think all US guitars are caressed and made passionately by a caring considerate workforce in America you're wrong, I'd rather have a far Eastern guitar made in a decent factory than American any day.
My point is basically about the labor overhead. If you pay £850 for a Sigma, you're letting Martin/Sigma pull one over on you, you're selling out, you're letting the labor-outsourcers get away with metaphorical murder. And you're paying full price for a lesser guitar that you're gonna lose a bunch of money on, rather than spending a little more on a better guitar that will hold value much longer.
Eastman's quality is great, and I'd have no problem to get another of their premium (eg Red Spruce) guitars over a grand and as their instruments holding value, their prices have risen (eg the E10 is almost 100% more expensive than when I bought mine) so the issue of their premium guitars hold value is not a straightforward one for everyone.
Getting back to the original question, I'd personally get the guitar with the more comfortable neck. I also prefer the idea of a spartan looking basic guitar built down to a cost in a USA factory than a fancy looking Chinese made copy aiming to look like something much more expensive. The latter, no matter how decent it might sound, has the whiff of a Chibson (or, more accurately, a Chartin) about it. No guitar costing under a grand should have abalone inlays and binding – it looks a bit ridiculous and, perversely, makes the guitar look cheap.
The first guitar was sub 150 notes.
Long story short, I personally wouldn't drop 850 quid on a sigma, there's better options out there for that budget, imo.
And, by the way, China has been making stringed instruments for at least 5,000 years. Why are we surprised they're brilliant at it? This is a Guqin -
https://dribbble.com/shots/11209271-Young-Woman-Playing-The-Guqin
Looks a bit like a guitar doesn't it. And here's a statuette of a girl playing one from the Han Dynasty (221-206 BC)
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Girl_playing_a_Guqin._Mingqi._Eastern_Han_Dynasty._Toulon_Asian_Art_Museum.jpg
Probably an Eastman.
Feedback : https://www.thefretboard.co.uk/discussion/58125/
The ones that makes me laugh are those who claim that US guitars aren't overpriced, they only cost more than "foreign" ones because of the high cost of labour in the USA. In fact, of course, the US pays lower wages than a lot of "foreigns" do - Japan, Germany, Australia, and South Korea all have higher wages than the US, and I haven't checked but it's a fair bet that most of the the rest of Western Europe does too.
On the other hand, I am reluctant to buy any guitar made in China or Indonesia. It's not that I worry about quality so much (that Sigma I looked at in the other thread, bling aside, was a fine instrument I'd be happy to own), or even human rights and worker exploitation (I feel concern for these things, but can never work out whether buying or refusing to buy does more harm or good), it is all about environmental practices. How do I know that the timber was harvested legally and sustainably? Even if the company claims that it's doing all these things right, how can I trust or verify that? I feel much more confident dealing with local companies which I know have good track records.
And the answer to that comment is it has abalone inlays and binding which are normally expensive because it is made in a low labour cost country and cost saved elsewhere has been put into making it look nice.