#1
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Recording King vs. Waterloo Parlor (Yes I'm going there)
I've had two Waterloo guitars I sold both. They were beautiful, played great and sounded wonderful. However, I'm not a pro, and I just wanted a Parlor that I could fool around with "in the Parlor". So, I sold them because they were so expensive. That was a few years ago.
Recently, I was hankering again for a Parlor - but determined to not pay over $500 - so I wouldn't feel guilty about buying it. I was able to find a Waterloo RPS-11. What a great guitar! The build quality and materials are just as good as I remember the Waterloo. Sure the Waterloo was prettier - but not $2,000 prettier. The only playing difference I can discern is the RPS-11 is 12 Frets, vs the 14 frets of the Waterloo. I actually prefer the 12 fret. And the nut on the Waterloo is 1 3/4" vs 1 11/16 on the RK. Anybody else compare these - or the RK RPS-11 to any other solid spruce top, Solid Mahogany Back/Sides parlor? How did they compare? |
#2
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You sure you wanna do this? Lol
Not sure about that RK model but the ones I have compare well to my similar Martins. Not nearly as good in build but the tone is close. |
#3
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Neck profile - hard V versus round C
I’ve owned the Waterloo WL-S deluxe, 12 fret magnificent cherry b/s, but it had a hard vintage V neck that I just could not warm up to. My issue not the guitar. Sold it.
I also bought a $100 used Recording King dirty 30’s, 12 fret. Two issues; one was the fret sprout that I had to file down or my hands would have been sliced open and two, was the intonation after the 5th fret. No fix for that one. It sounded great and I know some folks don’t mind a little drift in intonation. I’m not one of those and sold it. |
#4
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I own a Waterloo WL-12 & that is my favorite of all the guitars I own for lots of reasons. I also recently picked up a used Recording King ROS-627, which is pretty much a copy of the Martin 000-28vs that I owned many years ago. The RK cost me $500 and it gets pretty close to the Martin (Which I sold for the same reason you sold your Waterloo)
After years of kicking myself for selling the Martin I bought the RK when it popped up. I prefer my Waterloo to the RK but could be fine if I had to let the Waterloo go. I guess I'm in agreement with you on this issue but after regretting letting the Martin go I have no plans to sell the Waterloo. |
#5
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I thought I knew Waterloo models tolerably well
i can find no mention of an RPS-11.
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Silly Moustache, Just an old Limey acoustic guitarist, Dobrolist, mandolier and singer. I'm here to try to help and advise and I offer one to one lessons/meetings/mentoring via Zoom! |
#6
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Recording King vs. Waterloo Parlor (Yes I'm going there)
Quote:
The RPS-11 is the Recording King. He mistakenly said Waterloo RPS-11. Last edited by davenumber2; 05-04-2022 at 07:34 AM. |
#7
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I've never owned a Waterloo, but I've played quite a few. I did own a Recording King parlor several years ago (I think and RP-06? But I could be wrong).
My take: Nothing at all wrong with the RK. Great price, good tone, and I liked the thick, D shaped neck mine had. The tone wasn't great, but it was good. For a sitting around, knock-about, pick up and play Parlor, it did the job. I picked up an Alvarez AP-70 a few years ago (it's my daughter's now) and I honestly think it was a better guitar all the way around (just doesn't look "vintage" like the RK). YMMV. Having said that, the Waterloo's I've played are in a different class in every category. They sound bluesy, bc that's the tone they went for specifically. Everything about those guitars was purposeful. I definitely hear a tonal difference between them and the RK I've owned and played, not to mention the build quality. There's a reason they cost what they do. Is it 2k better? Well, that's up to the individual buyer. Good luck!
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Treenewt |
#8
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Been years since I played a RK, and I don't remember the model. It was a 12fret 000 size, and I thought it sounded great. I landed up spending quite a bit more and got my used Collings 000, but I left with a healthy respect for some of the RK models out there. And that video of the RPS-11 sounds fantastic!
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'19 Waterloo WL-14X '46 Gibson LG2 '59 Gibson ES125T '95 Collings 0002H '80s Martin M36 |
#9
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I hope the more expensive Recording King parlors are better made than the Dirty 30's model I have...
Really fun guitar, fun to play, boxy old sound...but the bridge is lifting after only 3 years. I know it's a cheapo guitar, but there's plenty of cheap guitars out there that don't have that problem. |
#10
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Two poor quality front & back photos of my recently purchased ROS-327. Based on what I've learned this guitar was built in 2009. It's trying to be a Martin 000-28vs and it gets pretty close! The neck profile seems a bit thinner than the Martin I used to own but the guitar plays and sound great.
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#11
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I have a RK RP-10. I think it's extremely awesome for the price - and versatile. Jamming buddies have always been impressed with it. The only thing I'd upgrade would be the tuners - although I've have it for years though and still haven't got around to it, they actually work fine. I just want open back tuners...
Note for Jeff: Yes it's way better than the dirty 30s series!! At least in my opinion. I have played some high-end parlors occasionally over the years and although they were "better" - certainly better looking - they were also almost 10x more expensive, bang for buck it's a great little guitar.
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National Resophonic NRP 12 Fret Loar LH-700-VS Archtop Eastman E8-OM Herrmann Weissenborn Recording King RP-10 Recording King RG-35-SN Lapsteel Maton 425 12-string ESP 400 series telecaster Eastman T485 Deering Americana Banjo My Youtube |
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Tags |
parlor guitar, recording king, waterloo guitars, waterloo wl-14 |
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