#16
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I thought Aaron's review was excellent. Detailed, thoughtful, and honest.
And as an owner of an X20 with the Ghost + K&K system, my thoughts differ from his only in that I absolutely love the plugged-in sound, and the guitar is 100% for me. I agree with him that, acoustically, it isn't a loud guitar. That came as no shock to me, as I really wasn't expecting it to be loud. As others have pointed out, it is definitely not a dreadnought! But volume isn't everything (I'd have gone for an X30 if it was), and I have no complaints about the tone. In fact, I have no complaints at all. Hand on heart, it is the best guitar I've owned over the last 50+ years, and if I ever sell it, then it will be to fund the purchase of another Emerald. |
#17
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Based on the responses so far, I also wonder if the Ghost bridge weighs a bit more and dampens the top a bit? I'm not personally going to purchase another X20 with the Ghost bridge just to do this particular comparison, so I'll have to leave the question as idle AGF speculation.
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#18
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I'll be sure to tell my X20 (from 2016) that it is too quiet the next time it plays at a bluegrass jam on Thursday, with me carrying the primary rhythm for the circle. No one complains about not hearing it in the jam.
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#19
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Quote:
I enjoy Aaron's reviews. I am a player, not a reviewer, and I find the entire playing/owning experience with my Emeralds to be the best, based on 5+ decades of playing. I like the variety of guitars I have currently, but if I had to narrow it down to just one, it would be one of the Emeralds.
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Some CF, some wood. |
#20
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Here's the review to save folks having to prove they know what a fire hydrant or bicycle look like! And then sitting through seemingly endless adverts! I think Aaron has the action too low on the top strings. The Ghost bridge is perhaps sucking out energy rather than transmitting the vibrations into the guitar body? The standard pinless carbon bridge may do a much better job of getting string energy into the body. And perhaps a beefy set of mediums (monel?) would give this guitar a lot more pure acoustic punch.
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I'm learning to flatpick and fingerpick guitar to accompany songs. I've played and studied traditional noter/drone mountain dulcimer for many years. And I used to play dobro in a bluegrass band. |