Posted on Mar 20 2024 02:55 PM
BB_Bunny wrote:
I've never played one. Care to expand on that?
Sure.
The Sidejack Baritone I bought was drop-shipped from some central warehouse; the shop I bought it from never touched it, let alone eyeballed it. If they had, they never would have let it get into the hands of a player.
Numerous paint flaws - which I can sorta forgive on a more-or-less budget instrument - included having paint stains on the white binding. It speaks to poor QC, as I'm no painter or even a paint expert and I saw the flaws immediately. The binding was chipped, the end of the fretboard had a crushed spot, there were razor cut lines in the finish, and there were also gaps spots in the finish, where the wood was visible - but those spots had clear-coat over them.
The trem cavity was off enough that after the guitar had been painted, somebody had to take a hand router to it to add room at the back of the cavity to properly align the trem unit. IMO the guitar should have been cut in half at the moment they realized the trem couldn't be properly installed without heroic measures.
The nut was terrible. I had to have a good nut made for it by my tech.
The fretwork was ... well, depending on your definition of "good" and actual needs as far as frets go ... sub-par to say the absolute least. Sharp fret ends, one fret not fully seated in the fretboard, and the level & crown they performed at the factory was simply not good. Since I was having my tech make a nut for it anyway, I had him fix the frets.
After a couple of weeks of using it after my tech finished his work, I grew so frustrated with the trem system's complete inability to stay in tune that I converted it to a hardtail plate, and that's how it remains today.
Normally I would have simply returned an instrument received in the condition I received this one, but I needed it ASAP to finish a recording project I was in the middle of. Plus I had no confidence a replacement would be any better, and I did like the color and style.
The only positive thing I could say about the guitar before I had all that work done was that the pickups sounded pretty good with a little EQ, but from the factory they were far too close to the strings and needed adjusting. (I don't mind having to set a guitar up to my playing style, but fretting high notes caused the strings to contact the neck pickup.)
So yeah. That's my experience with the Sidejack. Upon sending a description of the problems and photos to back them up, the vendor felt so bad they refunded me $100.
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Last edited: Mar 20, 2024 14:58:51