si bueno , lo calculaba con el dolar a la par con el euro.
de todas formas el la compro antes asi q no se lo q le saldria la broma . y si cuentas el viaje y la estancia mas .
yo no digo q no comprara una guitarra cojonuda q de sobra lo es .
solo digo q se puede tener una guitarra cojonuda tambien por mucho menos aunq no sea una guitarra de marca.
mirad lo q dice este luthier
Today, the Gibson Custom Shop builds some expensive and good-sounding guitars, using the old nitro-cellulose lacquer (which is a problem because of environmental and health issues).
All other electric guitars from Gibson and other manufacturers, are lacquered with modern synthetic lacquers, such as acrylic or polyurethane lacquers. Instruments that are lacquered with these artificial substances, look very good, have a durable finish, but sound just like crap. The tone does not come through, it is damped in the plastic. The tone adapts the soft artificial sound character of the plastic lacquer.
What makes things even worse, those instruments do not age. They stay that crappy way, since the wood can neither breathe or dry, nor vibrate in its own fashion. Even the old nitro-cellulose lacquer is far from optimum, but it as it is made of cellulose (the basic building block of a plants structure) is more related to wood than a synthetic lacquer. It also builds cracks with the time and the wood can breathe and age.
Have you ever wondered why some musicians play guitars where large parts of the lacquer have chipped off ? It is not that they cannot afford one of the dirt-cheap new instruments that look so perfect.
So my question is: Can the cheapest Gibson, Fender, Squier or any Korean made guitar have a high-quality sound, if it is not packed into a thick plastic lacquer package but is treated with a natural lacquer ?
Well, this is easy to find out: I invested $180,- in a Squier Affinity Stratocaster. The looks and buildt-quality of this guitar are really satisfying, but does it sound any good ? No, it sounds just like shit. Not at all like a Strat (or any electric guitar) should sound. The tone on any pickup is muddy, with short sustain, and no definition. The character of the tone is a plastic character that gave me a good headache after a short time of playing.
So I disassembled the guitar and grinded the complete lacquer off the neck and the body. After having completed this stinky and dusty affair, I knocked on the guitar body, and it sounded like wood again, the plastic character was gone. Bare wood, ready to finish...
parece q dice lo q yo no?