Firefly Guitar
Firefly Guitars
Check here to see if they’re in stock!
Street Price: $149.91
Hey folks! Here
is a follow up to my Firefly FF338
First Impressions post
a few weeks ago. I’ll call this a thorough review now that I’ve spent
some time with this guitar. I’ll just cut straight to the chase: this
guitar is the best bang for the buck I’ve ever played. BUT! It will need some work to be gig worthy.
They
are sold out again!
The Good
Playability
To me, playability is
priority number 1, especially with a set-neck guitar. The neck on this
guitar is very comfortable. It’s not too thick or too thin, a real
middle-of-the-road neck. I’ve played a lot of guitars in this price range
and they usually have a cheap feeling to it. I know that’s hard to
explain, but usually when you play a cheap guitar, it just feels cheap.
This neck is smooth and feels solid in my hand. I did have to add a
slight bit of relief to the neck with a truss rod adjustment and the truss rod
operated as it should. It even came with an Allen key for adjusting said
truss rod. No matter how many sets of Allen keys you own, the size you
need is always missing, so this is a nice bonus.
Freebies
The guitar also came
with a 10ft cable, the aforementioned Allen key for the truss rod, and a baggie
of picks. I’ve been using the cable when playing at home, and so far so
good, but I have seen posts from other owners indicating these cables didn’t
last long. I’m not showing up to a gig with just this cable, I’ll put it
that way. I’m also very picky and my picks (pun intended), so those picks
are just sitting in a bag still. For a beginner guitarist or someone who
hasn’t amassed a large collection of cables and picks, it’s a nice bit of swag.
Speed of Delivery
These are only sold
new on Amazon.com. Amazon seems to be able to get any product
anywhere in the Continental U.S. Almost immediately. I ordered mine
in the morning and it was delivered the next day for free. If you
buy a used one on eBay, this will probably not be the case, so don’t expect
that.
The Questionable
Fretwork
The fretwork is good,
yet not perfect. It’s good in that there aren’t any dead frets. The
frets were leveled and well crowned. There weren’t any sharp fret
ends either, which I experience on about 75% of guitars I’ve played in this
price point. The guitar also doesn’t fret-out when I bend notes.
However, they needed a final polishing. When I bent a note or put a little
vibrato on it, you can feel and hear the string dragging on the frets.
That’s nothing that a little .0000 steel wool couldn’t fix though.
Sounds
When I buy guitars in
this price range, I usually almost immediately replace the electronics.
When I did my Firefly FF338 First Impressions post, I hadn’t yet played at band
volume. I’m actually ok with how the stock electronics sound in this
guitar. It’s a very mellow sound, as you’d expect on a semi-hollow body
guitar of this style. The hum buckers are a medium output I’d say.
However, as I’ve recently
found out after playing this guitar at gig volume, the pickups are micro phonic. Meaning
that any considerable amount of gain and volume will have considerable
feedback. When I filmed my YouTube demo up above, I was just
chalking it up to being a semi-hollow body. After seeing some other
videos posts about this guitar, I can conclude that it was indeed from the
pickups being micro phonic. I worked with it though, kind of had a blast
of feedback before each song like those old Black Flag songs. My gigging
days are about to be on hold for a while, so I’ll probably hold off on
upgrading these pickups since I do most of my home playing through headphones
now.
Finish
I put this under
“Questionable” because it’s not a bad finish job, it’s commensurate with a
guitar of this price point, but there are flaws. I’m also not picky on
stuff like this. But the gold sparkle looked great under the
lights. Guitarists in the crowd paid compliments to how it looked (and
sounded). The only flaws I could find on mine were a slight scratch on
the lower bout, and the binding job in the F-holes was sloppily done. But
you have to really be looking at the guitar to notice them. I’ll just say
for the price of this guitar, the finish is great, but it wouldn’t pass the
quality control of companies selling $1,000+ guitars.
The Bad
Hardware
The tuners were unusable.
They were jumpy. I would do about half a rotation on the tuner with no
change in pitch, you could see the shaft that the string is actually wrapped
around not moving as you twisted the peg, then suddenly it would jump. I
immediately changed the tuners with these Wilkinson Tuners (on Amazon.com here ) These
tuners fit right in, didn’t break the bank, didn’t require drilling any new
holes, and seem to do the job. There are more expensive tuners, but I
couldn’t justify $50+ tuners on a $140 guitar.
The bridge is also a
little suspect. I was able to intonate and set the appropriate height,
but when I play it unplugged, I can hear it rattle. I haven’t noticed it
coming through the pickups, but it’s noticeable if you’re just sitting on the
couch noodling away while watching TV. I may replace it, I’m not sure
yet.
The Nut
4 of the 6 nut slots
were way too high. When nut slots are too high, you’ll get no intonation
on the first 3-5 frets. What this means is the open string could be in
tune, and bar chords further up the neck could be in tune, but any open chords
in those first few frets just sound way out of tune. Even when I did bar
chords down there with the band, I noticed my pitch sounded sharper than the
rest of the band. This is fixable with some simple files and a little bit
of elbow grease though. After I played a gig with this guitar, I filed
down the slots and got some pencil graphite in there.
Final Verdict
For $139.91, this is a
great guitar. HOWEVER, it will need some work. If you’re not comfortable
doing these adjustments yourself, expect to dish out probably close to what you
paid for this guitar to get it in tip-top shape (if you want to replace the
pickups too). That’s how this guitar is sold so cheap, they skip some of
the fine tuning at the end of the manufacturing process. Those little
things like thoroughly polishing the frets and properly filing the nut slots
takes time. I’d rather they spent a few more dollars during the final
assembly to do these two simple processes instead of the money they spent on
that “free” cable it shipped with.
Let me reiterate this:
this is a great guitar for the money. It will need work and at least a
tuner upgrade when you receive it to be a solid player. This is true of
any guitar in the price range. If you’re playing at band volume with any
amount of gain, the pickups will probably need to be replaced too, unless you
love feedback. At this point, you’ll be looking at a $300+ guitar by the
time it’s all said and done if you don’t do the work yourself, but it will be a
great playing/sounding/looking guitar, and still worth the price of admission.
Cheers,
ijaz
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