Re: Refurbished Epiphone Dot - Good or Bad?
you'll probably be better off buying one you've played... only one really spoke to me with its tone...I'd say play it before you buy it.
The traditional advice is that you have to "play it first", but there's some big flaws in that theory:
1) Music store guitars, especially mid-priced imports, are not set up well, so the intonation may be off, the strings too high, the PU's too low, the neck needing a truss rod adjustment, etc. Maybe a $3,000 Gibson or PRS comes from the factory with a great set up, but don't count on it with an Epi.
2) Doesn't take long for a few kids with grubby hands to coat strings with sweat, dirt, food, etc. and deaden the strings, or even start them rusting. Some of those strings qualify as biohazards.
3) The Achilles heel of imports is their PU's, which are usually Asian-made, meaning they're buried in cheap wax and wound differently. Which translates to an invariably muddy tone. To hear any guitar's real potential, you need to put in a set of American-made PU's, for clarity, depth, and definition. Cheap PU's mask a guitar's true tone.
The "play it first" theory means that you'll turn down some good guitars that just need a good set up, or happen to have particularly poor PU's. The best inport in the store may have a bad set up, and you'll turn it down because the intonation makes the chords sound sour. What "speaks" to you first & foremost is a good set up. Secondly, you notice good pickups. Many good imports lack both of these.
If you buy your guitar in a store, the first thing you want to do is change the strings. Get Dan Erlewine's book on setting up guitars, and you can do the set up yourself. A $250 refurb (with a return guarantee...how can you go wrong?), leaves you cash for a set of SD's, DiMarzio's, or Gibson's. You can make it sound like you paid 10 times as much for it.
My theory: you usually can't tell squat about how a mid-priced import will play & sound until it's properly set up & rewired (upgraded PU's). That's a rare thing in most music stores. So buying in a store vs online isn't an issue. Don't be a nervous old lady. Get one in good condition and do a set up, and if all is good, swap out the PU's; if not (twisted neck, frets unlevel, etc) send it back, & get a replacement.
By the way, 335's are a GREAT design You'll love the feel and the sound. I was a solid body man for years, and now 335's are my favorite.