idsnowdog
Imperator of Indignation
I picked up a used Harley Benton electric Mandolin off Craigslist today. The jury is still out on this one because it took a lot of effort to set up and may never be a reliable instrument. Which shouldn't be surprising for an inexpensive instrument.
The good:
Small
Nice finish and binding
Solidly built
Clean wiring
The bad:
A bit heavy for its size and the body could be thinner
Horrible weak and noisy pickups
Poor gear ratio tuners
Action is too high
Tiny horrible frets
Compared to my cheapo Rogue acoustic Mandolin the neck is narrow and hard to play due to a combination of high action and tiny frets. Even after lowering the action and setting the intonation it is hard to fret cleanly because the frets are too small. The neck could be slightly wider and the neck profile could be a beefier C shape which would make it more comfortable to play. The string spacing at the bridge is also poor because you have two strings going through one hole in the baseplate and the string notches are too close together which makes tuning a chore. They could just as easily have two string holes on either side of a central intonation screw rather than having the intonation screw off to the side and wasting half of the saddle width. Or they could have used a combination of through body ferrules and top loading strings.
The pickups are standard strat style single coils with 6 slugs and a ceramic magnet underneath. The problem is the poles don't match the string spacing and the magnet is far enough away from the strings that you don't get good string sensing. The result is weak and noisy pickups with no shielding for the electronics. They could have just as easily used cheapo mini rail humbuckers or wound the coils around a central magnet for $2 more. I thoroughly shielded it and the amount of noise went way down but the pickups are still poor. I also put a cool rails in the neck and the tone and string coverage is much better. I will probably replace the pickups with a set of cheapo Belcat rail pickups for $5 a piece. I may also put a spare piezo below the bridge.
Lastly the tuners have a poor gear ratio which makes it hard to keep it in tune. 1/4 turn and your either 20% sharp or flat. Since the strings are too close together it's hard to get the two strings tuned in unison.

The good:
Small
Nice finish and binding
Solidly built
Clean wiring
The bad:
A bit heavy for its size and the body could be thinner
Horrible weak and noisy pickups
Poor gear ratio tuners
Action is too high
Tiny horrible frets
Compared to my cheapo Rogue acoustic Mandolin the neck is narrow and hard to play due to a combination of high action and tiny frets. Even after lowering the action and setting the intonation it is hard to fret cleanly because the frets are too small. The neck could be slightly wider and the neck profile could be a beefier C shape which would make it more comfortable to play. The string spacing at the bridge is also poor because you have two strings going through one hole in the baseplate and the string notches are too close together which makes tuning a chore. They could just as easily have two string holes on either side of a central intonation screw rather than having the intonation screw off to the side and wasting half of the saddle width. Or they could have used a combination of through body ferrules and top loading strings.
The pickups are standard strat style single coils with 6 slugs and a ceramic magnet underneath. The problem is the poles don't match the string spacing and the magnet is far enough away from the strings that you don't get good string sensing. The result is weak and noisy pickups with no shielding for the electronics. They could have just as easily used cheapo mini rail humbuckers or wound the coils around a central magnet for $2 more. I thoroughly shielded it and the amount of noise went way down but the pickups are still poor. I also put a cool rails in the neck and the tone and string coverage is much better. I will probably replace the pickups with a set of cheapo Belcat rail pickups for $5 a piece. I may also put a spare piezo below the bridge.
Lastly the tuners have a poor gear ratio which makes it hard to keep it in tune. 1/4 turn and your either 20% sharp or flat. Since the strings are too close together it's hard to get the two strings tuned in unison.
