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A Fender-inspired mash-up from respected boutique maker Don Grosh
Dave Burrluck (Guitarist), Mon 19 Sep 2011, 12:28 pm BST
The tobacco burst finish and tortoise-shell scratchplate look great together.
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Don Grosh has been building guitars since 1985, first for Valley Arts and then, since 1993, for his own brand. He relocated his California base to Broomfield, Colorado in 2005, where the company now employs six people and builds around 20 guitars a month.
"Don spends 95 per cent of his time in the shop," says Grosh's Brent Johnson. "He still hand-selects and tone taps every piece of wood, hand fits every neck to every body, paints and polishes every guitar and manages all other aspects. And he personally checks every guitar before it goes out."
Stylistically, the 'Jet's swamp ash body certainly reflects the Jazzmaster, Tele and Strat into a highly attractive new but familiar design. The Fender vibe continues with the one- piece 'aged satin' bolt-on maple neck/fingerboard and its conventional four-screw joint.
"The 'board edges are nicely rounded so that it feels like your favourite old Fender. It looks like one, too."
The detail is fantastic, with a great neck shape - a full-bodied 'C' (22mm deep at the first fret, 24.7mm at the 12th) - and flatter-than-vintage radiused face with immaculately installed frets. The 'board edges are nicely rounded so that it feels like your favourite old Fender.
It looks like one, too. To that end we have the old style truss rod adjustment at the base of the neck, which means quick adjustments aren't easy - as we found due to an over-low supplied set-up.
The hardware reflects the quality of the build: vintage-looking Gotoh locking tuners and Gotoh vibrato, albeit with a drastically shaved block and strings that sit much closer to the top plate than an original Fender version.
The top plate and saddles are steel and the arm pushes into its collared socket, you then wind it down onto an internal screw thread and can adjust swing tension.
Adding dual soapbars to a Fender platform is hardly unique and here the in-house made, Alnico V-powered Grosh G-90s mount directly to the body. The three-way lever, master volume and tone are placed on the over-sized tortie scratchplate, while the output jack is Tele positioned on the body's edge on a solid metal football plate.
Not surprisingly, the ElectraJet has a Fendery snap and a nice smooth sustain. The overall feel is played in - like a well-gigged guitar rather than a new one - it's subtle but noticeable.
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Superbly detailed build. Hybrid Fender-inspired design. Excellent sounds.
Supplied set-up. Old-style truss rod adjuster.
Far from a copy but infused with Fender flavour, the ElectraJet is superbly executed with great sounds, highly detailed build and loads of options. Join the queue…
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ElectraJet