Aaron turner
Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2025
Great, not one complaint,
Robbie
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2025
Sounds great and looks great, but its difficult to get in tune, once in tune hold pretty well though.
Diego Morel
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2025
Tuve muchas espectativas por esta guitarra, al parecer ya no lo fabrican en ese color, la verdad me sorprende la calidad de la misma, buenos captadores (a pesar de que solo posee 3 posiciones para el switch de las pastillas), muy buenos armónicos. El equipo llegó en perfectas condiciones y con todos sus accesorios. Ya podré ejecutar los temas de Soda Stereo con una Jackson :)
善逸話
Reviewed in Japan on January 17, 2024
メタルギターが欲しくて購入、包装も丁寧で塗装も宝石の様な深い青でとても気に入りました。フロイドローズは段々下火になってる感じがありますが買えて良かったです。
George T Wruck
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2021
This is a nice quality built guitar for the price. Although the 2 point tremolo may be too complex for most beginners. I bought because I'm at the intermediate level.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2021
Nice guitar for a beginner like me. I like it so far.
Sam
Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2021
Love this guitar. I did tons of research and wanted to epic 80s rock feel. This is it! What a price with a Floyd Rose. I am not a beginner but not nit picker either. This is a fantastic electric guitar with a floyd rose and solid as they come! I love it!
Jeffrey Brown
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2020
In the 1980's my first "real" guitar was a Charvele Model 1 that looked almost exactly like this guitar. The only difference really was it only had a bridge pickup but pretty much everything else was the same - since they were the same(ish) company back then - but of course now both are owned by Fender and have both gone in their own directions under the same roof. But.. in any case this guitar is simply fire. I was expecting a decent guitar - it said Jackson on it so it needed to be good, but at the amazing price for this slice of slickness you get well more than you pay for. It's not perfect, of course, but out of the box it was only in need of a slight tuning, plugged in and literally played until I was dripping in sweat - it was like being transformed back in time - The neck was smooth as silk, the pickups were hot enough, most likely will upgrade in the future but these were good enough for now. All of the fretwork was perfect and I did not have to set the intonation or the string height at all - no buzzing frets and the action was just perfect. I was not only surprised but definitely relieved - nothing is harder than having to do work on your new guitar before unleashing it - I have played it almost every day since I have had it now - it's in a rotation of 3 guitars but it immediately stole top billing from my ESP. With all of this being said I do have one little complaint, for the moment it is just more of a nit pick, but if it develops into something I will not be happy about it because it is such a little thing, but that little thing is a big thing if it does not work properly. The thing I am talking about is the small piece of metal that is used to hold the string in the floyd rose end of the guitar. The little box that tightens up against the string and holds it against the bridge wall. When I decided to change out the low E string I was expecting a small piece of metal, with a lip on top that allows you to slip this piece out as you control it - like the good old days I guess. What I got was just a plain small, very thin box with no lip on it anywhere that fell out of the tremolo bridge and caused me to look for it on my black rug for almost an hour. When I found it and was stringing the guitar back up it just felt so flimsy for the amount of tension it is responsible for. not having a lip that laid on top and being so thin metal that there was no indentation for the bridge screw to fit into makes me wonder just how many string changes it will last before I am forced to figure out a different solution. Like I said, if it doesn't break then there is no issue and the engineers figured out a way to cut a little cost at no harm. If It does, well it then becomes a design flaw - time will tell.