And of course, splitting the pickups thins things out to a more single-coil spank without sacrificing clarity (just a small, expected drop in volume) so you can do more of those Strat-type things than on, say, a 2-humbucker guitar with no coil taps or splits. Chorus, phase, wah, overdrive, everything we threw at them came out clear and articulate. Which, in turn, means they take to pedals incredibly well. So, how does it sound? Well, the stock humbuckers are surprisingly lively, responsive and sound great through a clean channel. The stock tuners will serve you just fine and upgraded tuners are available as an add-on during ordering. It would have been nice to include locking tuners as a standard feature, but that’s really getting nit-picky. The bone nut is cut pretty well, no major issues there but you may need to file out a bit if you decide to string up with a heavier gauge (the DockStar ships with 10-46’s). The neck itself features a dark ebony board and 24 nicely polished and crowned frets, so high octave tapping is possible whereas a lot of semi and full-hollow guitars top out at 21 or 22 frets. A nice, classy touch for an instrument like this. The floating bridge is solid, and the ebony tailpiece is better finished than we expected. Fretwork has been improved over the years at the Phred finishing shop here in the States (the guitars themselves are constructed overseas and sent back for final setups), and the neck is nice and comfy. The DockStar also features a bit more of a traditional control layout, with 2 humbuckers, master tone and volume, and two discreet mini-switches for your coil splits.įirst thoughts: this guitar is light and a breeze to play. The koa top and back are simply gorgeous, and we must admit that fit and finish are certainly improved over the Ernesto we checked out back in 2014 (not that that model was bad, per se). Luckily, you can get a Phred instrument with more traditional electronics, which is what we have here: the Phred DockStar Koa. We liked that Ernesto a lot, but felt that the on-board effects loop might (if you excuse the pun) throw some novices for a loop. While there’s a several-years long waiting period for one of those guitars, and a starting price around $10,000, Phred offers guitars in the much more reasonable “sweet spot” of $500-800. A few years back we had an opportunity to review the Phred Ernesto VH3, which was a hollow-body thinline guitar reminiscent of the instrument Trey Anastasio plays in Phish.
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