1974 LoPrinzi (Augustino) LR-15 Dreadnought Guitar
I've had a bunch of Augustino LoPrinzi dreadnoughts through the shop over time and they've spanned his and his daughter's production through the years. To my ears the best of them sound like a hybrid between the "Gurian" sound and the "Martin" sound. This one does that, too, in a D-28 sort-of pattern.
Interestingly, the body shape on this reminds me more of a Gibson AJ -- it's round in the shoulders, has a soundhole farther "north," and the lower bout is extended longer than the Martin mold. Most Augustino-influenced boxes are not in this sort of shape and that made me perk up a bit when I worked on it originally some time back.
Previous repairs included a neck reset, fret level/dress, and setup -- this time around all I needed to do was give it a restring and setup. It's still playing fast and spot-on and it sounds like money. The neck on this particular guitar is "low/thin" in feel -- almost like a modern Taylor -- or maybe a late '80s Taylor? It's fast for sure, like a quick '80s electric guitar neck -- think shallow-profile Peavey!
Anyhow, it's got gorgeous specs to meet its sound -- solid rosewood back and sides, a solid spruce top with x-bracing, mahogany neck, and ebony board and bridge.
Repairs included: previously a neck reset, fret level/dress, and setup -- currently a fresh setup.
Top wood: solid spruce
Back & sides wood: solid rosewood
Bracing type: x
Bridge: ebony
Fretboard: ebony
Neck wood: mahogany
Action height at 12th fret: 3/32” bass 1/16” treble (fast, spot-on)
String gauges: 54w-12 lights
Neck shape: slim C
Board radius: ~14"
Truss rod: adjustable
Neck relief: straight
Fret style: medium
Scale length: 25 3/8"
Nut width: 1 11/16"
Body width: 15 5/8"
Body depth: 4 1/2"
Weight: 5 lbs 0 oz
Condition notes: it appears to be all-original save the bridge pins. There are no cracks but the finish has "finish crackled:" and "finish hairlined" all over. It looks grand and inviting. My couple of nitpicking criticisms of the guitar are -- the saddle was slightly misplaced so I had to recut it so the back edge is the point of contact. -- and the truss rod access is a 10mm hex nut buried in the neck block, so you have to do a bit of fussing to get it turned with a socket wrench.
It comes with: a period hard case with cool blue lining.
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poznek@cccs.k12.pa.us