NGD: Hadean EG-491
Posted: Fri Jun 30, 2023 11:29 am
I wasn't considering buying one of these because I thought it couldn't be great at that $135 price. Time and curiosity wore me down. I didn't have a Deluxe (or knockoff), and none of my teles have trems. I finally realized there was nothing to lose just trying it out. I have a 12 string acoustic and an electric nylon string Hadean, and they're great. So I guessed at worst this would be a mod platform with a lot of options.
Before adjusting anything, the guitar played well out of the box, but wasn't keeping tune very well. My first guess was new, cheap strings. My second guess was a binding nut. My third guess was the trem maybe fitting loosely or needing a fulcrum screw adjustment. Finally, I found it... The tuners were not tightened down. That was easy to fix. I don't remember that happening with a new guitar, but voila - tuning stability.
I played some more and decided to lower the action, and that worked out well. No high frets (on a $135 guitar!). It doesn't even need the fret ends filed. After that, the neck felt just like my favorite Squier Classic Vibe 50's tele, which cost 3 times as much. The radius is flatter though. I lowered the pickups for better tone and they sound surprisingly good, and when not playing they're dead quiet. Good for blues rock. But if you gig, you'll hate these microphonic pickups. I like em for the interplay.
Ok, it's a keeper, so I took the plastic covers off, and adjusted the trem to a compromise between what I wanted and how well it could return in tune. It's tighter than I'd like, but works alright. I spent hours playing and tweaking. There is something wrong in the neck position, it sounded intermittently like it's shorting out, but not in the bridge. Just a tinge of lowering volume and crackle, definitely a short.
The morning after, I find the neck position is a completely dead circuit now. The bridge is fine, but the neck position issue needs a tear-down diagnosis and the pickups seem to be mounted to the pick guard. I'm guessing there's a cold solder joint in there somewhere that was happy for a few hours after coming off a hot UPS truck, but shrunk in the air conditioned house over night. So I need to consider what else I might want to do while I have it apart. It's not getting returned because it plays great. The rest can be fixed.
So it plays great, looks nice, and has great potential. It weighs only 6 lbs, 13 oz. I wouldn't mind finding it a better trem. I checked GFS, but the only lefty import trem that would have fit is out of stock. Despite the issues, I like this guitar a lot more than I expected to, and I am blown away by the value, so it will be worth an electronics upgrade.
It came double boxed, and UPS fired 2 shots at it but missed the guitar completely.
I plugged in and tuned, and put the trem arm in. It felt like the threads were cross-threaded, and I kept backing it out to check, but no, it's not cross-threaded. But it was pulling out what looks like waste pot metal (assumedly from the block) at the end of its threads.
I did a little work on that and now it threads in nicely, but that may be something someone would have returned it over. On the plus side, the arm stays where I put it and works.Before adjusting anything, the guitar played well out of the box, but wasn't keeping tune very well. My first guess was new, cheap strings. My second guess was a binding nut. My third guess was the trem maybe fitting loosely or needing a fulcrum screw adjustment. Finally, I found it... The tuners were not tightened down. That was easy to fix. I don't remember that happening with a new guitar, but voila - tuning stability.
I played some more and decided to lower the action, and that worked out well. No high frets (on a $135 guitar!). It doesn't even need the fret ends filed. After that, the neck felt just like my favorite Squier Classic Vibe 50's tele, which cost 3 times as much. The radius is flatter though. I lowered the pickups for better tone and they sound surprisingly good, and when not playing they're dead quiet. Good for blues rock. But if you gig, you'll hate these microphonic pickups. I like em for the interplay.
Ok, it's a keeper, so I took the plastic covers off, and adjusted the trem to a compromise between what I wanted and how well it could return in tune. It's tighter than I'd like, but works alright. I spent hours playing and tweaking. There is something wrong in the neck position, it sounded intermittently like it's shorting out, but not in the bridge. Just a tinge of lowering volume and crackle, definitely a short.
The morning after, I find the neck position is a completely dead circuit now. The bridge is fine, but the neck position issue needs a tear-down diagnosis and the pickups seem to be mounted to the pick guard. I'm guessing there's a cold solder joint in there somewhere that was happy for a few hours after coming off a hot UPS truck, but shrunk in the air conditioned house over night. So I need to consider what else I might want to do while I have it apart. It's not getting returned because it plays great. The rest can be fixed.
So it plays great, looks nice, and has great potential. It weighs only 6 lbs, 13 oz. I wouldn't mind finding it a better trem. I checked GFS, but the only lefty import trem that would have fit is out of stock. Despite the issues, I like this guitar a lot more than I expected to, and I am blown away by the value, so it will be worth an electronics upgrade.