#31
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But unfortunately it's not looking good. Someone gave her the guitar and she has sentimental attachment. I'm not the kind to push so I'd say my chances aren't too good at this point?
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Jim Dogs Welcome......People Tolerated! Last edited by llew; 10-29-2019 at 05:43 PM. |
#32
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Interesting.... I had a couple of J-200 Western Classics a few years ago and found the warmth of the rosewood just didn't work in that sized body.... of course since no 2 guitars sound exactly alike, the ones I had could've been poor examples.... Personally I think the J-185 was a much better guitar than the J200
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#33
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Quote:
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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! |
#34
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I've recently played a maple J200 that was exceptional (after playing a few duds previously). But it is so wildly different than a Collings OM3 that I don't know how you'd compare the two. I'd want both.
Which do I prefer if I have to have one? Well, the Collings because I find Collings OMs pretty much terrific at everything I ask them to do. The rosewood variants like the OM3 sound subjectively warmer than the J200 in my experience. I suppose in absolute terms they don't have as much bass, but I don't find the J200s particularly bassy or nearly as dark sounding as J45s. OM3s are at least the equal as strummers. I don't have a clue why someone thinks Collings OMs (rosewood especially) don't make good strummers--clearly different tastes and expectations: I prefer the internal texture that the Collings delivers when strumming over that of the blended (or wooly if thought of negatively) sound of J45s. And Collings OMs are both exceptional as finger style guitars and when played with a pick. Nevertheless, if it's the J200 sound that most appeals, the Collings OM3 won't be a substitute. You'd need to look for a Collings SJ to get a similar sound scape from a Collings. |
#35
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Apple’s and oranges.
Buy an OM if you like bright mids and highs- reduced lows and volume. Buy a Jumbo for all of that, plus some bass. |
#36
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So DV -- What did you end up doing? Do you have a new guitar?
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#37
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The Collings will be 100 times better built. But I'd keep the Gibson...
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#38
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IMHO it is very difficult to beat a good (S)J-200 for all types of playing including finger-style! I have a few OM guitars (no Collings just a Waterloo) and my go to guitar is my SJ-200 Standard maple. My Martin 00-28VS comes in second for finger-style. Neck width is usually a determining factor for finger-style but I have no problem with the different neck widths. Just my 2 cents worth.
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----------------------- Too many guitars, so my wife says... |
#39
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if you decide to sell your SJ200, I'd be interested.
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______________________ Freedbaby -------THE FLEET------- 2014 Martin GPCPA5 (1st guitar, bought 12-24-2014) 2014 Martin D15M 1967 Framus Classical 2015 Epiphone DR-100 1989 Squire Telecaster 2010 Fender USA Strat 2015 Reverend 6-Gun 2016 Tom Anderson Drop Top-T 2016 Gibson Hummingbird, Ebony Finish Vox AC10, Fender Mustang II Good Golf, Good Tennis, or Whatever You Like To Q! |
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Tags |
acoustic, collings, collings om, gibson |
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