UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
Concert or Parlour steel string for around £200-300? (UK)
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I'm looking for a good build-quality, unused, small concert or parlour size guitar. A few brands I've noticed are yamaha, tanglewood, alvarez, takamine, sigma. I was look at the yamaha fs800, which goes for about £250 in the UK, but noticed that the US price is closer to £140 ($200), so I'm not sure if the build quality is very good.
I'd like the sound to not be too boomy. Just in the middle, a decent balanced sound. There's too many choices, and I'm so scared I'll end up buying one that isn't right for me, or one I'll end up disappointed with. I have a yamaha c40 classical, for ~£100, and while it's not bad, you can definitely tell that it's a £100 guitar. I'd rather something much higher quality than that, if it's possible for my budget.
I've found this one:
https://www.andertons.co.uk/sigma-sig-00m-15 but am still unsure about it. I like the colour, it's solid top, and it's about the size I want.
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So start by crossing off anything that doesn't have a solid top. Hint: sales staff often won't know, and manufacturers are coy to the point of outright deception, so you need to know the code words. "Laminate", "HPL", "layered" and "multi-layer" are all code for plywood.
"Solid" is code for real wood. In this market segment, timber names such as "mahogany", "cedar", "maple" and "rosewood" when written without that key word "solid" mean it's plywood. (Is this a deceptive trade practice? Sure it is. But it seems to be just barely legal enough, and they all do it.) Remember:
"Solid spruce top" = real wood.
"Spruce top" = plywood.
In this price range, you are looking at an instrument made in China, Indonesia, or some other low wage country. That is a given. First-world guitars (Europe, USA, Canada, Japan, and so on) start somewhere close to double your budget, and First World guitars made out of solid wood generally cost more again.
So you are looking for something with a solid top, very likely from among the brands already mentioned. Two others to consider are the gigantic South Korean companies Samick and Cort, which are little known but probably the biggest makers in the world by quite a margin, with factories at home, in China, and in Indonesia too. They sell under their own names, but mostly do the actual manufacturing for other firms. Both Washburns and Epiphones, for example, are made by Samick.
I like the colour, and the size seems good. But I'm still open to more suggestions. Thanks!
P.S. I wouldn't worry about having to baby a solid wood guitar; in the temperature/humidity ranges we get in the UK (I'm assuming that you're UK based?) it won't change significantly.
I also would say not to get bogged down by this notion of all solid woods is best - they don't 'mature' in the same way, but equally some mature by losing top end sparkle. Some like the 'warmth' but not all. Wood isn't consistent by its nature either.
Once germageddon is over, I'd suggest trying a load out in your price range at a decent store. I certainly wouldn't buy blind...