I've got 2 PRS SE Soapbar II Maples that I got for $350 each, and have one with P-90's and one with a mini-humbucker at the neck and a stacked SD P-90 at the bridge. But I decided to get one more and rout it out for full-sized humbuckers.
When I got down to GC, the cupboard was bare- no more Soapbar II's in stock and none on order. But they did have one of the brand new SE Singlecuts which they gave me for $411.58 (the ticketed price was $599 and the MSRP was $799):
http://www.prsguitars.com/sesinglecut/
The neck is a little bit thicker than on the SE Soapbar II's but right out of the carton it plays like a dream. Perfect intention and action all of the way up to the 22nd fret. This guitar is lighter and thinner than a Gibson LP, but it still sounds very full and rich.
The stock pickups aren't too bad, but I did think that the neck was a bit too dark and the bridge was a bit too bright so I took the BurstBucker Pro #2 bridge/BurstBucker #2 neck set out of my Epiphone Flying V and put it in this PRS.
This guitar is an absolute beauty- looking at it you'd think it was a $3500 guitar except for the "SE" on the headstock. And it puts my real Gibson Les Pauls to shame (not the cheap $700 Special Junior Specials but the real ones with a carved top).
I believe that PRS started the Korean SE series a few years back with the Santana model which was impressive for the price, but IMO still not as good as a real PRS or Gibson. The original SE Singlecut was pulled for legal reasons but these guitars just keep getting better and better.
Whether you buy one or not, you ought to check them out just to see what is coming out of Korea these days. I suspect that much of the machinery is computerized so it spits out exactly what you tell it to...
Steve Ahola
When I got down to GC, the cupboard was bare- no more Soapbar II's in stock and none on order. But they did have one of the brand new SE Singlecuts which they gave me for $411.58 (the ticketed price was $599 and the MSRP was $799):
http://www.prsguitars.com/sesinglecut/
The neck is a little bit thicker than on the SE Soapbar II's but right out of the carton it plays like a dream. Perfect intention and action all of the way up to the 22nd fret. This guitar is lighter and thinner than a Gibson LP, but it still sounds very full and rich.
The stock pickups aren't too bad, but I did think that the neck was a bit too dark and the bridge was a bit too bright so I took the BurstBucker Pro #2 bridge/BurstBucker #2 neck set out of my Epiphone Flying V and put it in this PRS.
This guitar is an absolute beauty- looking at it you'd think it was a $3500 guitar except for the "SE" on the headstock. And it puts my real Gibson Les Pauls to shame (not the cheap $700 Special Junior Specials but the real ones with a carved top).
I believe that PRS started the Korean SE series a few years back with the Santana model which was impressive for the price, but IMO still not as good as a real PRS or Gibson. The original SE Singlecut was pulled for legal reasons but these guitars just keep getting better and better.
Whether you buy one or not, you ought to check them out just to see what is coming out of Korea these days. I suspect that much of the machinery is computerized so it spits out exactly what you tell it to...
Steve Ahola
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