Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Top Material Type:solid spruce。Back Material Type:Okoume。Neck Material Type:Okoume.Guitar Pickup Configuration:2 Band EQ.Hand Orientation:Right hand。Number of Strings:6 strings.Number of Frets:21F。Scale:650mm(25.59 Inch)。Fingerboard:Technical Rosewood 。Bridge:Rosewood.Nut Width:48mm(1.89 Inch)。Finish:Glossy。String:Classical Guitar Strings。Overall Length:38 Inch
Arturo
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2024
I felt compelled to write a review after seeing a 3 star review. The 3 star review mentioned a telecaster body style being a downside. Mate, that’s the physical design of the guitar. If you don’t like that don’t purchase it. I think the guitar is fantastic. The silent aspect is great for practicing in a crowded apartment complex. The build quality is FANTASTIC for the price point! I cannot emphasize the build quality being good for the price. I’ve had no problems playing it. It feels great. Has a wider neck than an electric but slightly smaller neck than a classical nylon string. Very comfortable feeling. Amazing neck finish. I bought this guitar several weeks ago. Nothing has broken. Nothing has come off and I play it A LOT, including some difficult pieces. No visible wear and tear that is noticeable with cheap guitars after playing them for a while.
John C.
Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2024
For $200, this is a nice instrument; however I am sending it back, because it isn’t designed well enough. The good is that the neck is a beautiful wide, thin U profile with a flat radius like most classical guitars. The tuners are solid and the body is finished very nicely. And it comes with a very nice gig bag. The bad, it’s a telecaster style body, which balances really badly (neck dive and pushes the nut further away from the fretting hand), unless you move the bridge side strap button closer to the neck one on the back of the body. Not terribly difficult, but you do have to drill a hole. The other thing is the volume knob is right in the way of the picking/plucking hand. If you strum hard or try to mute at the bridge, you bang your fingers on the knob. It’s unnecessary. Just moving that back to being below and in line with the bridge (about 1”) would have fixed that. As it is, I don’t want to have to drill more and plug holes, etc in a new guitar. If the manufacturer is reading this, here’s my advice. Keep everything the same, but use an S style body and keep the volume and tone knobs away from the string path. Maybe even use a 3-band EQ with sliders and mount that instead of knobs.
Recommended Products