Diego
New member
In the same store that I tried that kickass expensive Les Paul in my other thread, there was also a new, Chinese Epiphone Dot for a very reasonable price.
I've always gassed for a 335 or anything similar so I thought why not. Tried it before the Gibson of course, through the same amp.
Oh My.
1) Crap fretwork.
I could feel the frets resisting any stretches I did, and it didn't feel like grease or gunk. Instead it had that "serrated" feel that you know it's down to poor crowning.
It didn't feel too smooth on the sides of the fretboard either. So an inmediate no-go on that one. I've tried other Epis and they were nowhere near this level. Appaling and totally unacceptable for the price.
2) Pickups. What the hell?
I know, we're all a bit spoiled in here, aren't we? We're a bit more demanding than the average consumer, but come on.
The neck pickup was boomy as hell, way too hot for its purpose, unarticulate in the highs and kinda scoopy. The bridge pickup was way weaker in output (it was set a bit too low but not enough to justify the difference), thin and raspy. It couldn't sound less 335-ish if you dropped Blackouts on it.
Zero mids, warmth or "wood" in the sound and that's not what you want out of a semihollow, right? I guess they're cheap ceramics meant to be replaced or something.
I thought maybe the amp wasn't helping matters, but I plugged the Historic LP afterwards and that thing killed through it.
3) No setup at all.
The nut wasn't well cut at all and way too high, the frets were awful, pickups were set at random height/angle, it wasn't intonated and the neck definitely needed a bit less relief.
I'm not expecting a world-class setup out of a cheap chinese instrument, but all of this does play against it a bit too much.
I have no experience with MIK Epi semihollows but I've tried a few old MIK Epi Les Pauls and I'm betting there's no way the Korean Dots could be this bad.
Very dissapointed with this one.
I've always gassed for a 335 or anything similar so I thought why not. Tried it before the Gibson of course, through the same amp.
Oh My.
1) Crap fretwork.
I could feel the frets resisting any stretches I did, and it didn't feel like grease or gunk. Instead it had that "serrated" feel that you know it's down to poor crowning.
It didn't feel too smooth on the sides of the fretboard either. So an inmediate no-go on that one. I've tried other Epis and they were nowhere near this level. Appaling and totally unacceptable for the price.
2) Pickups. What the hell?
I know, we're all a bit spoiled in here, aren't we? We're a bit more demanding than the average consumer, but come on.
The neck pickup was boomy as hell, way too hot for its purpose, unarticulate in the highs and kinda scoopy. The bridge pickup was way weaker in output (it was set a bit too low but not enough to justify the difference), thin and raspy. It couldn't sound less 335-ish if you dropped Blackouts on it.
Zero mids, warmth or "wood" in the sound and that's not what you want out of a semihollow, right? I guess they're cheap ceramics meant to be replaced or something.
I thought maybe the amp wasn't helping matters, but I plugged the Historic LP afterwards and that thing killed through it.
3) No setup at all.
The nut wasn't well cut at all and way too high, the frets were awful, pickups were set at random height/angle, it wasn't intonated and the neck definitely needed a bit less relief.
I'm not expecting a world-class setup out of a cheap chinese instrument, but all of this does play against it a bit too much.
I have no experience with MIK Epi semihollows but I've tried a few old MIK Epi Les Pauls and I'm betting there's no way the Korean Dots could be this bad.
Very dissapointed with this one.
Last edited: