Buying Guitars Online?

alex1fly

Well-known member
I'm looking to add a Telecaster to the family. First one. Nearly every piece of gear I've ever purchased has been by "running the racks" and finding one that I connect with, or was a make/model that I had good experiences with elsewhere. Unfortunately COVID is spiking like mad in my area (Denver), and I don't expect that to end any time soon, so I'm wrestling with the thought of buying online.

Any tips for online shopping vs in person?
How do you avoid second-guessing the instrument you receive?

Thanks!
 
The thing I like about MF is if I don't jive with the guitar I can return it to the closet Guitar Center.
 
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And, (I think), if you order it online, you can have it shipped to a local GC. That way you can do "hands on" before walking out with it.

That is what I did with my Iced Tea Traditional. I got a bit of attitude because they were not getting commission on a Les Paul. But they did let me plug into a Marshall for a bit.
 
Make sure that the store had a good return policy. I know Sweetwater does. But other than that, I wouldn't hesitate to order a guitar online.
 
Ask the right questions and you will get a lot of good information. The stores already mentioned work. If you want a more mom and pop scenario you will never go wrong by shopping Willcutts.
 
Well, for now- GC is having quite the financial trouble. This could mean good deals or, more likely, they won't be around a long time. I don't know how that will affect MF.
 
15 years ago I thought the idea of buying a guitar online sight unseen (or unplayed) was lunacy. Now the majority of my rather expensive guitar purchases have been online.

The reason I have more confidence in doing it online these days is that I'm confident in what I know I want from a guitar. Do your research, know the model, know the specs, scour forums and reviews, watch youtube videos about that particular guitar - or as close as you can get to it. By the time I order I have a pretty good idea of what that guitar is going to sound like, and a reasonably good idea of what it might play like. There is some unknown involved, sure, but you can usually get a pretty good sense of these things by doing your homework. I've bought both new and used guitars online this way and I've never been disappointed. I've even asked Reverb sellers to weigh a guitar for me if they haven't listed the weight in their description because that's something I know is one of the key determining factors whether I will enjoy it or not.

I will add the one caution that you need to do a setup on the guitar after it arrives BEFORE you make a judgement on whether its good or not. I've had a couple arrive and kinda felt "meh" about them until I did a full setup and got it playing the way I like. THEN it was like, "wow, this is awesome!" You'd be surprised how just a 1/4 turn of the truss rod and setting the string radius and action can take a guitar from 6/10 to 10/10.
 
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I ordered four guitars online this year, and all four of them arrived in perfect condition, and all were keepers.

I pulled my Goldtop out of the case and it was perfect. Usually, with Les Pauls I have to lower the action a bit, this guitar was perfect. It is now my No. 1.
 
I will add the one caution that you need to do a setup on the guitar after it arrives BEFORE you make a judgement on whether its good or not. I've had a couple arrive and kinda felt "meh" about them until I did a full setup and got it playing the way I like. THEN it was like, "wow, this is awesome!" You'd be surprised how just a 1/4 turn of the truss rod and setting the string radius and action can take a guitar from 6/10 to 10/10.

i worked in a guitar store for years, and played thousands of guitars out of the box. Certainly some guitars just had that magic/mojo we're all looking for, but i found the variances between certain guitar models to be negligible after a proper set up. sometimes "the good one" was just the one with better action/intonation straight from the factory.
 
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