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Author | Topic: One Helluva Steel String Acoustic Guitar (Cheap! |
Jerry Hayes Member From: Virginia Beach, Va. |
![]() I just left the local Guitar Center Store with a great deal on an acoustic guitar. It's an Epiphone Master Series dreadnought. Man, this thing sounds great. While there I tested it side by side with some of the lower end Martins and Taylors ($1,200-$1,800 range) and it sounded as good as all of 'em and better than some. These only sell for $499.99 which includes a nice hardshell case. They knocked $50 more off and put in a set of strings and a setup. The guitar is made in China and is all solid wood. I'm surprised at the great work coming out of China these days. This is the 3rd Chinese made guitar I've bought in the last year. The first was an Ibanez Artcore Electric archtop and then the other was an Epiphone 335 style "Dot Studio". It has a pretty satin finish and nice inlays but the tone is the thing. I went in to look at a mandolin I'd heard they had on sale but this guitar caught my ear when I heard someone playing it. After he put it down I tried it out myself and since they only had one in stock I had to grab it before someone else did. Now I'll just have to find a way to break it to the wife but I'm sure she'll understand. My last four wives said "It's the guitars or me" and I still have my guitars....Have a good 'un, JH ------------------ [This message was edited by Jerry Hayes on 22 September 2004 at 10:31 AM.] |
Stephen Gambrell Member From: Ware Shoals, South Carolina, USA |
![]() Brother Jerry, speaking of Chinese guitars, have you heard/played one of the BlueRidge flat-tops? Not quite in the same class as my old D-28, but a LOT of guitar for under 1000.00! I guess if you ain't gotta worry about things like minimum wage, worker's comp, the environment(hey, I'm all for logging the rain-forest, if I get a decent guitar out of it!), then it's easy to build good, inexpensive guitars. Has anybody ever thought about sending a Buddy Emmons record to Beijing????? |
Joe Alterio Member From: Fishers, Indiana |
![]() I have an Epi AJ-18S that I love and I feel it sounds comparable to a low-end Martin or Taylor. I spent many years looking for an acoustic, but kept walking away from the guitar store empty-handed after playing ~$500 guitars and comparing them to the nicer $1,000+ guitars. This is one guitar that had a comparable sound...I love it. Epiphones are great guitars...glad to see you have found yours, Jerry! Joe |
Jerry Hayes Member From: Virginia Beach, Va. |
![]() Hey Joe, I love this guitar for sure. I also have an Epiphone (Made in Japan) A-Style mandolin that I bought in California around 1983 which sounds great. It has more acoustic volume than my Gibson F-Style has and actually sounds better I think. It's just that the ol' Gibson is so dang purty. I really love the finish on the new Epi acoustic guitar and it has a vintage look to it. It also has Grover tuners which are the open style and look just like those high dollar Waverly keys....JH ------------------ [This message was edited by Jerry Hayes on 23 September 2004 at 07:01 AM.] |
David Mason Member From: Cambridge, MD, USA |
![]() One word: CNC. OK, that's not really a word, it means computer numerical control, and by using it to set up production machines, any company anywhere can make consistent-quality instruments using a much less skilled labor force. The fret slots, pegheads, neck contours, all the areas that used to require skilled (read expensive) labor are done by machine. Of course, the quality of the wood you feed into the machines matters, and some companies also over-economize on pickups, wiring, tuners, fret finishing etc. too. I'm not sure how you could measure exactly how much of the savings originate because of CNC, and how much are a result of Asian labor; Godin, Warmoth and others are using this technology to turn out good quality, reasonably priced instruments and parts in North America too. I do think that the $200-$500 guitars of today beat the stuffing out of the same priced guitars of the 70's and 80's, and if you adjust for inflation there are more decent, affordable new guitars available now than ever before. |
Bill Hatcher Member From: Atlanta Ga. USA |
![]() Jerry. I also purchased the orange Ibanez artcore archtop guitar. I am able to do all my own repair work. The neck has already shifted on the instrument which I was just waiting for it to do. I pulled out the frets and corrected the "ski slop" by removing a bit of fingerboard at the riser block. I am going to redo the nut with a bit wider spacing and am looking for a cheap Bigsby to put on it. I am also going to re-locate the selector switch to the upper bout and set in some soundposts in it. The guitar cost me about $240. I bought it to use on gigs so I would not have to beat up my old Gibsons. I have already used it on gigs with great success. What you trade off in these Chinese instruments is quality of materials. If they were made out of better grades of mahogany and maple they would be a steal at these prices. Right now they are just good prices for decent instruments. I personally do not see much longevity for these Chinese guitars. They just won't hold up made out of these sub-par materials. As as been the case with many Asian makers, the external appearance of the instruments is what sells them. They look very nice---but underneath they are mostly the same low quality instruments that used to look bad. THAT is the big difference in todays' Chinese instruments. Let me know when a company comes out with a Chinese made guitar from dried quality hardwoods at these prices. I will buy more. I view them as cheap disposable beaters that play well and you don't have to worry about them getting stolen, damaged, etc. I also purchased a $129 Chinese Strat at Guitar Center. The neck is VERY nice tight grained maple and the body is good alder. The electronics are sub par, but the instrument was good enough to take to a recording session and no one noticed any difference. You have to look through about 20 to find one nice one!! I wish that these Chinese instruments had been around when I started playing in the late 50s early 60s! |
Jerry Hayes Member From: Virginia Beach, Va. |
![]() Hey Bill, If you can score a copy of it, in Guitar Player magazine around July of 2003 the reviewed the Ibanez Artcore with vibrato. It was the thinline blue single cutaway model which is exactly the one I bought. It was the Editor's Pick and received a rave review. I bought mine as I do some gigging with an Elvis impersonator and I was looking for something to do the Scotty Moore thing with. This Ibanez did it. I love this guitar and the vibrato tailpiece works every bit as good as any Bigsby. It also has a roller bridge which makes it play in tune good when using the whammy. Have a good 'un, JH ------------------ |
Stephen Gambrell Member From: Ware Shoals, South Carolina, USA |
![]() David-- Taylor, Martin, and Larivee are just SOME of the big boys using CNC machines to insure uniformity of fit and size----but I don't see their guitars getting any cheaper! |
Scott Houston unregistered |
![]() The other trade off with "made in China" guitars (and everything else made there) is that you toss your hard earned US dollars into supporting an oppressive communist regime. It's a cheap guitar because it was cheap to make. I'm not trying to be a jerk, just pointing out that you don't get something for nothing. Where something is "made" not a simple issue in a global economy, but it's worth thinking about when you make a purchase, IMHO. There are lots of great luthiers in small and big shops right in our backyards-sometimes it's worth saving up just a little bit longer to support them. |
Bill Hatcher Member From: Atlanta Ga. USA |
![]() So are you saying the music store that sold it to me that is an American company did not make any money?? How about the shipping company that picked the instrument up at the docks and delivered it to the store. That is also an American company. They didn't make any money? How about the American dock workers?? They don't get paid to unload Chinese cargo?? The world economy is such that many of the arguments against buying from oppresive countries is not as big a deal as it used to be. As long as the Chinese mind their own business, I am fine with them. I don't buy French or German or from any other country that hung us out in Iraq these days. I think these countries are more offensive than the Chinese. |
David Mason Member From: Cambridge, MD, USA |
![]() We are experiencing our classic Forum "topic drift" here, oh well. The issue with China as I understand it is our trade deficit with them. Their share of our unpaid national debt is ever increasing, and the worry is that they could exert a consequent influence on our political and economic policies. Money does talk, sometimes in hidden and subtle ways. I have read that Saudi Arabia owns about 6% of the U.S. economy, and this is cause for concern that they exert undue influence. |
David L. Donald Member From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand |
![]() (mebe read it all before screaming at me in caps) If some one in a locality makes something, it's fine for the locals. But then, someone somewhere else, can always gripe it wasn't made and bought there. Or made here and sold there. "I ain't gonna buy a guitar made in Massachusetts and help that liberal regime, Now China may have an oppresive regime, There are many people out side the USA that think the USA is an oppresive regime because of our import duties too. And us telling them by, brute force and cultural omnipresense, how to live. We do not live in a world that is the USA and outside it, our economy effects theirs and very much visa versa. If we don't buy things from them too, they can't buy ours. There are large investments by the USA in many different countries, it is not just them investing here. Commerce is a two way street, and it has ALWAYS been in flux, sometimes one way sometimes another. So if we do buy something from other parts, we are not neccesarily hurting ourselves, but helping the global economy, of which the USA is an integral part. The thing is economies, what is built and sold where, This isn't an arguement FOR globalisation, So if our friend found a guitar he can actually affiord, and it is made in China : He has helped some little people in China make a living, and their cost of living is less than ours. Put money into the China ecconomy, that will ultimately raise the middle class, and put more presure on the one party system there to change bit by bit. Put money into the global economy, to help keep it stable, Kept another american musician working in hard times doing country music. Not to bad a list of positives. No man is an island, not country's economy is an island in this day and age either. If Jerry got a guitar he really likes for $500, then he got a good guitar, if Martin can't make that guitar for less than $1,800, then they can't, but they wouldn't have SOLD it to Jerry anyway, so they have not really lost anything. And the sound is what Jery liked, not the overall quality of the instrument. so ultimately he will still want a Martin down the line. He may eventually trade this one and eventually get the Martin, When he trades it, it will be sold and bought in the USA economy. Either way it does ultimately help the USA economy, and the importers, truckers and sales staff that got the guitar from China to Jerry's hands. Lastly, and I hope this isn't a thread closer.. please. Our President said we are starting a war for X reaons : you are with us or against us. Period end fo story. France is very much in the anti-terrorist business, and been there for decades, and quietly helps the USA behind the scenes. In France the population of muslims is so large it would be essentially opening another front, Look what's happening over just the issue of headscarves, let alone an invasion. I HAVE missed being bombed, at my Paris news stand, by 15 minutes. Just lucky. So you can imagine the American people were "hung out to dry in Iraq", If you want to argue that big business in France and Germany wanted to keep their share of the pie, Who wants to be presured and villified to do something you think is wrong, So it was a good guitar, and helped out some small little Chinese guitar maker, To make this cause to hammer other cultures is spurious, inelegant, We live in our house, on our street, in our town, One helluva topic drift too. [This message was edited by David L. Donald on 25 September 2004 at 05:46 AM.] [This message was edited by David L. Donald on 25 September 2004 at 05:59 AM.] |
retcop88 unregistered |
![]() Man the guy bought a Guitar he likes.Who cares about French bull$hit? ------------------ |
Stephen Gambrell Member From: Ware Shoals, South Carolina, USA |
![]() James, I'm SHOCKED!!! You stole the words right out of my mouth! |
David L. Donald Member From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand |
![]() Sort of one of my points, but more succinct. |
Bill Hatcher Member From: Atlanta Ga. USA |
![]() A concerned American citizen. |
David L. Donald Member From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand |
![]() The same. |
Pete Burak Member From: Portland, OR USA |
![]() I thought the Big Baby Taylor sounded really good (in the back room at GC - $350 w/gigbag). I tried the $99 Epi, and it was seriously lacking in tone (no bottom end at all), but there were a few families there on Sat afternoon trying and buying for their kids. I didn't see the Epi you are talking about at this location. I am also concidering a Yamaha CSF35. I am looking for a smaller guitar for my living room that I won't mind if our child drags it around a bit, but can also be brought to a gig. I have a '96 Taylor 710 that I prefer to keep out of reach of our tiny dancer! BTW... What is "Nato"?... as in "Nato Back and Sides". [This message was edited by Pete Burak on 27 September 2004 at 08:18 AM.] |
Jennings Ward Member From: Edgewater, Florida, USA |
![]() YOU CAN KEEP THE SAAP BOX AND MEGAPHONE!!! TOO MESSY!!! JENNINGS AN ORIGINAL HILL WILLIAM............. ------------------ |
Jim Peters Member From: St. Louis, Missouri, USA |
![]() I ve got 2 Carvins(USA),a Gibson(USA),a Yamaha(Japan),a Squire bass(China),a Larrive(Canada),a Nashville Tele(Mexico),a GFI(USA),and amps by PV, Fender and Carvin, all at different prices, all for different purposes. My 2 accoustics were relatively inexpensive, the Larrivee(best guitar I,ve ever owned!) was only $725 with case, and sounded as good or better than the 2500 Martins and Taylors . My little Yamaha APX is small, lightweight and has electronics, and cost around $400 new, but sounds way better thru a PA than without, but that's why I bought it. Everything I bought had reasons,eco and/or ergonomic. JimP |
Denny Turner Member From: Northshore Oahu, Hawaii USA |
![]() THANKS David; Saved me from writing a longer missive. Aloha, |
Michael Lee Allen Member From: Fresno CA USA |
![]() David Donald...Thanks for the BEST posting I have ever read on this Forum. Most members will not agree with you or even understand some of it but... Somebody had to take the time to say these things. Having toured France and as a regular visitor to French Canada with a Sephardic Judeo-Moroccan orchestra I see all this. I regularly hire Muslim musicians to work side-by-side with Sephardic Jews and Orthodox Christians. We use instruments and other equipment made in at least twenty countries. And we all get along. We share language, culture, and many religious teachings. I own handmade American instruments as well as cheap Chinese things. The Chinese stuff does the job after a proper setup. Some things CANNOT be bought here...know anybody in the USA who builds a Kanun or Saz??? Somethimes I get SO TIRED of the "redneck" segment of this Forum and plenty of others agree with me. Never been anywhere or done anything??? OK??? I have. And going back to subject...if any of you have seen and played the the Eastman/Eastwind stuff coming out of China it is as good as top USA stuff. I already have too much stuff or they would be at the top of my buy list. Welcome to an ever-changing world and it's changing faster and faster as I get older. I'm getting used to it and you should too. |
David L. Donald Member From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand |
![]() Jennings, this started from here, not from me quote: A direct SOAP box attack on my neighbors in my place of residence, a people I have been adopted by and make me feel liked and at home. By extention a direct attack on me. I did NOT care for that, especially since it is demonstrably WRONG. Jim P. I see you have a system you can afford that gets you working. Denny, thanks for the kind words. Michael Lee... well "best".. ah I truely doubt it.... YOW. It is better to look at the WHOLE picture, [This message was edited by David L. Donald on 05 October 2004 at 11:01 AM.] |
Michael Lee Allen Member From: Fresno CA USA |
![]() Still the bet posting I've read here. Only thing that comes close were the brave few who stood up (sat down and typed) to defend Robert Randolph against all the bashing he's got here. This post started out as a guy passing on his opinion on a good guitar at a good price...ended up as a French-bashing tirade. Back to subject...NOBODY can really afford to make bad guitars anymore because nobody will buy them. No matter where an instrument is made you will have to do a setup on it to play to your taste and style. Some of the Chinese guitars I have that cost less than $200 are way better than the stuff Gibson and Fender were shipping out in the sisties when I was a kid. Nobody is stopping anybody else from buying American instruments. You will just have a hard time finding a USA-made guitar for under $500.00. If you don't want to buy foreign products that is your right as well. Only problem is that some things are simply not made in the USA anymore and you will have to do without those or modify your attitude. I am old enough to remember when all Japanese products were considered cheap junk. Are you old enough to remember that too? Japan got good and smart and competed and got market share. Korea followed Japan. China followed Korea. Now Indonesia is following China. You can vote with your dollars if you want to. I do too sometimes. But not all the time. One GOOD thing about all this is that a kid starting out nowdays gets an instrument that stays and plays in tune and plays well and that will keep them sticking with it in the beginning. How many people started out in the old days and quit because the instruments (even name brand professional ones) were unplayable and non-adjustable. That's the one benefit to the Chinese guitars. And in several trips to France I NEVER had any problems. Nobody spit in my soup. Specified equipment was rented and delivered in good working order. Accomodations were as described. Money paid as agreed. NO B.S. whatsoever. |
David L. Donald Member From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand |
![]() And you forgot gig food here... Sometimes fair by french standards, but generaly fine to stellar by most other places. A good meal is included in most any gig you play from a bar to a festival. Sometimes the little cafe gigs feed you better. Pros are pros where ever you go. Certainly some instruments are totally indigenous to a country or region, and so might have ONE transplanted maker in the USA... But I suspect those that would make that an issue have an equaly minimal interest in the MUSIC of another land, not just it's indiginous products. I see no reason not to mix Duane Eddy guitar, with a frenchTrad diatonic accordian, an african djimbe drum, a dijerido from Australia and a Promat Push Pull from Croatia. If the parts from all over make and interesting music together, why not use them. |
Pete Burak Member From: Portland, OR USA |
![]() Recent Acoustic Purchase: http://steelguitarforum.com/Forum10/HTML/004411.html |
retcop88 unregistered |
![]() So I guess down the road we can look forward to Iraqi's products flooding the market after the war and rebuilding is over. I hope their first effort in the automobile industry will be better than the "Toyopet".Wonder if I could trade in my Yugo GT? ------------------ |
David L. Donald Member From: Koh Samui Island, Thailand |
![]() Flooding!!! Just imagine one freighter filled with Iraqi dates.. ruining the US economy... NOT! Just saw there will be a a 5,000€ retail Renault micro car made in Iran starting next year. I would rather they made small cars.... I'd buy an Iraqui ud, if it kept one ud maker off the streets An ud is like a fretless lute or a big body fretless mandolo, and they sound pretty neat. Don't think anybody in Oskosh is making them these days though. [This message was edited by David L. Donald on 07 October 2004 at 08:16 AM.] |
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