NGD: SX Hawk, mahogany, 2xP90, stop+TOM
Posted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 2:35 pm
I've been toying with the Strat/Les Paul hybrid concept for a while, and then I found this: SX Hawk RN Mahogany P90 NA Stop TPG
The SX Hawk, with its Strat body shape, but in mahogany, with a tune-o-matic bridge and stop tailpiece, and two P90s? And for only $180? I had to take the plunge.
First impressions: this thing is really well-made for $180. The neck edges and frets are particularly nice, especially at this price point. I've seen guitars costing five times as much with worse frets than this. The weight is moderate - I haven't weighed it yet, but Rondo's claim of 8.5 pounds feels about right. The pickups are pretty good; not great maybe, but they sound like P90s. The hardware is all generally pretty decent; nothing to write home about, but functional. The tuning machines are probably the cheapest-feeling part - typical low-cost Asian mini tuners. Fit and finish everywhere are pretty good. They definitely went for the thick-and-glossy clearcoat, but for $180 what do you want? So far I've played it a couple times at practice and been entirely happy with it. The setup was even quite good out of the box.
The only thing that feels especially Strat-like, other than the body shape, is the 25.5" scale neck, and for that reason I decided to pull the neck to see about the the possibility of replacing it. Also, I wanted to see how the body was routed, in case I wanted to change pickups. (I don't have any mini-humbucker-equipped guitars...hmm.)
This picture exaggerates the figuring in the fingerboard a little. This was the closest thing I could find to a blem. That dark spot actually seems to be discoloration of the wood itself under the clear finish. And that light area is actually a bit of flame in the neck (again, the picture exaggerates it a bit). The bridge area. You could actually get the bridge a bit lower if you wanted. Pickguard off! You can see that it's routed very specifically for the P90s, which was a bit of a surprise to me - I was expecting something more generic. Neck pocket. The width looks just a smidge over Fender-standard 2-3/16; the length might be 1/64" under the standard 3"; and it's a little deep at about 6/8". The one "oops" I could find - somebody messed up on this one screw hole for the pickguard.
The SX Hawk, with its Strat body shape, but in mahogany, with a tune-o-matic bridge and stop tailpiece, and two P90s? And for only $180? I had to take the plunge.
First impressions: this thing is really well-made for $180. The neck edges and frets are particularly nice, especially at this price point. I've seen guitars costing five times as much with worse frets than this. The weight is moderate - I haven't weighed it yet, but Rondo's claim of 8.5 pounds feels about right. The pickups are pretty good; not great maybe, but they sound like P90s. The hardware is all generally pretty decent; nothing to write home about, but functional. The tuning machines are probably the cheapest-feeling part - typical low-cost Asian mini tuners. Fit and finish everywhere are pretty good. They definitely went for the thick-and-glossy clearcoat, but for $180 what do you want? So far I've played it a couple times at practice and been entirely happy with it. The setup was even quite good out of the box.
The only thing that feels especially Strat-like, other than the body shape, is the 25.5" scale neck, and for that reason I decided to pull the neck to see about the the possibility of replacing it. Also, I wanted to see how the body was routed, in case I wanted to change pickups. (I don't have any mini-humbucker-equipped guitars...hmm.)
This picture exaggerates the figuring in the fingerboard a little. This was the closest thing I could find to a blem. That dark spot actually seems to be discoloration of the wood itself under the clear finish. And that light area is actually a bit of flame in the neck (again, the picture exaggerates it a bit). The bridge area. You could actually get the bridge a bit lower if you wanted. Pickguard off! You can see that it's routed very specifically for the P90s, which was a bit of a surprise to me - I was expecting something more generic. Neck pocket. The width looks just a smidge over Fender-standard 2-3/16; the length might be 1/64" under the standard 3"; and it's a little deep at about 6/8". The one "oops" I could find - somebody messed up on this one screw hole for the pickguard.