1960s Yamaha FG-300 Jumbo Guitar
FG-300s were the fanciest flattop the company was making in its early years of acoustic production and they're often the most valuable, too. They're basically an FG-180 body but with all the trim blinged-up. It's got fancy fretboard inlay, lots of extra binding, ply-rosewood (vs ply-mahogany) back and sides, a big old countrified pickguard (see this other FG-300 to see what an original looked like), and an ABR-style adjustable saddle/bridge unit fit into the normal acoustic bridge -- in Gibson Hummingbird/J-200 fashion from the same time period.
Despite having worked on scads of old "red label" Yamahas, I've only worked on three FG-300s. There just weren't as many made as there is demand for them these days. Every time one is in the workshop I have customers wanting to "vulture" it out of the hands of the owner. It's nice to be loved, right?
This one's all-original save replacement bridge pins and pickguard. The pickguard was missing so I traced the "pickguard shadow" and cut a new one from this almost-'70s-looking pickguard material. I think it suits the vibe of other Japanese imports at the time and it's nice and thin, too.
As I mentioned in the other FG-300 post, I really like Yamahas from this period and I like the tone from these FG-300s with their ABR-style bridges even better. Something about the heavier mass and plastic saddles suits its interaction with the lightly-braced ply top. These have more of a "Gibson J-45" tone than the normal FG series of the same body shape and general design. It's like there's a little more woody thud to the mids than on the others. Whatever it is -- it works!
I fixed this up for a local friend and post-repairs it plays like a champ.
Repairs included: a fret level/dress, bridge reglue, new pickguard, and glorified setup work.
Top wood: ply spruce
Back & sides wood: ply rosewood
Bracing type: x
Bridge: rosewood
Fretboard: rosewood
Neck wood: mahogany
Action height at 12th fret: 3/32” bass 1/16” treble (fast, spot-on)
String gauges: 54w-12 lights
Neck shape: medium-chunky C
Board radius: 12"
Truss rod: adjustable
Neck relief: straight
Fret style: medium-lower
Condition notes: while it does show lots of minor wear and tear throughout the body and the finish has yellowed quite a bit, just like other Yamaha ply-box products, it's tough as nails and has held-up great.
Comments
Thanks for sharing your work on these great old guitars, and also for the fascinating post you did on the Augustino AR 38. I have one of those as well, and it, too, is something special.