That being said, a coil cut seems like a better option than the phase switch, especially because it cut the volume off so much when I used it. And yes I know it was designed this way on purpose, I know there is a reason it only has limited electronics. Where it loses a few points for me is the versatility. I was able to get way more than just an ’80s rock tone with the ’84, as pretty much any crunchy tube amp tone sounds great with this pickup. The single Seymour Duncan JB humbucker is a ton fun, providing classic high gain and high output tones left and right. This 25.5″ scale length guitar has 22 medium jumbo frets with classic dot inlays. I was sent a model in the Metallic Blue finish, one of five eye grabbing and ’80s influenced colors. That Hard Maple neck features a nice Walnut skunk stripe and a Hard Maple fretboard as well. On the construction end you’ve got an Alder body with a Hard Maple neck that’s bolted on. Rounding out the hardware on this stripped down guitar are Kramer 14:1 tuners and sadly, they are not also “doubling locking”. A Floyd Rose 1000 series “double locking” trem system is paired to their own “doubling locking” nut system for all you dive bomb ready Satchel wannabes. A Seymour Duncan JB pickup holds down the fort with a push-pull volume pot that lets you series/parallel tap the legendary humbucker. A tribute to one of the most legendary guitar designs from the original Kramer company, this guitar is loaded with impressive specs. Wow, hair metal is alive and well at Kramer and I’m here for it. Will Kramer’s shred friendly ode to hair metal stand up to modern standards?Ĭost: $799.00, learn more at and find one on !Ĭheck out my 60 Second Guitar Review for HERE!
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December 2022
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