1966 Guild Mark I Classical Guitar
Who can fault the tone on a Mark I classical? It's bright and clean and balanced-sounding with a flamenco-style lilt to the voice. I find it a perfect "folk-fingerstyle" companion guitar, much like the middle-rung Swedish-made Goyas of the same time.
A local consignor brought this guitar in for resale and, while it needed a bit of work, it arrived in pretty decent shape. Jose did most of the work on this one and, post-repairs, it's playing spot-on and ready to serve.
Repairs included: a heavy-handed fret level/dress, bridge modification (lowered saddle and slot), setup, etc.
- Weight: 3 lbs 2 oz
- Scale length: 25 1/2"
- Nut width: 2"
- Neck shape: slim-medium D
- Board radius: flat
- Body width: 14 3/8"
- Body depth: 3 3/4"
- Top wood: solid mahogany
- Back & sides wood: solid mahogany
- Bracing type: fan
- Bridge: rosewood
- Fretboard: rosewood
- Neck wood: mahogany
- Action height at 12th fret: 3/32” overall (fast, spot-on)
- String gauges: medium-tension nylon (classical)
- Truss rod: non-adjustable
- Neck relief: hair of upbow
- Fret style: wider/lower
Condition notes: it's actually fairly clean throughout save minor scuffs/scratches mostly confined to the edges of the body and headstock and some usewear on the back of the neck. There's finish weather-check here and there throughout, too. The worst bit on this guitar is that it had a bit of warp to the neck (and a ski-jump at the fretboard extension) when it arrived. We ameliorated that by leveling/dressing the frets with a heavy hand-- so the extension frets and frets 1-2 are fairly low in profile while the rest are more or less "normal." It feels normal to play it, and this is a non-obvious unless you're looking for it, but is nonetheless there. The bridge also needed to be modified to bring the action down and so we've balled the string-ends rather than using the "tie-off" classical-style ends so as to give better downpressure/back-angle on the saddle.
It comes with: sorry, no case.
Consignor tag: CD
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