6-string Acoustic-electric Nylon-string Guitar with Spruce Top, Mahogany Back and Sides, Mahogany Neck, Pau Ferro Fingerboard, and Fishman Electronics - Sonata Burst
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Specifications |
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Brand | Cordoba | ||
Category | Classical & Nylon String Guitars | ||
String Type: | Nylon, | ||
Number of Strings: | 6, | ||
Body Shape: | Fusion 5, Classical, | ||
Left-/Right-handed: | Right-handed, | ||
Color: | Sonata Burst, Natural, | ||
Finish: | Gloss Polyurethane, | ||
Top Wood: | Solid Spruce, | ||
Back & Sides Wood: | Mahogany, | ||
Body Bracing: | Black Ladder, Fan (top), Ladder (back), | ||
Binding: | Composite, | ||
Neck Wood: | Mahogany, | ||
Neck Shape: | C, | ||
Radius: | 16", | ||
Fingerboard Material: | Pau Ferro, | ||
Number of Frets: | 19, | ||
Scale Length: | 25.6", | ||
Tuning Machines: | Cordoba Silver with Black buttons, | ||
Bridge Material: | Pau Ferro, | ||
Nut/Saddle Material: | Composite/Bone, | ||
Nut Width: | 1.889", | ||
Electronics: | Fishman Sonitone Classical, Fishman Sonitone, Undersaddle Piezo, | ||
Strings: | Savarez Cristal Corum High Tension 500CJ, .030-.044, Savarez Cristal High Tension, | ||
Manufacturer Part Number: | 05408 -, 05407 -, |
Absolutely love this guitar!
I have owned a half dozen nylon string guitars and this is a favourite. Supreme ease of playability. The neck and finish is wonderful. Sounds great overall although the electronics could be better. Still an absolute joy to play.
Not what I was hoping for
The guitar looks great but the tone is so subdued on both the high and low ends that I feel you lose the nuances that should be there. I also wasn't impressed with the playability. Full disclosure; I do have some arthritis in my hands but I didn't like the way the neck felt or fretted. It was uncomfortable for me.
Good guitar
Generally well-made guitar for the price. Although the strings looked new, 1 broke immediately the first time I tried to tune and another string a few days later; no big deal but nothing like having a brand new guitar and having to wait to order a new string set to play it. The action is a little on the high side; as best as I can tell, turning the truss rod either way has absolutely… read more no effect on relief - doesn't even detune the strings. So I'm stuck with high action, although the guitar is still playable. I haven't tried to file the bridge and will probably go to a shop to have the guitar setup. It sounds great though, acoustically or electrically, which is why I am deciding to keep it.
Excellent Entry Level Cordoba Fusion 5 Model
I’m an amateur/hobbyist guitarist and at age 67 I’ve been playing quite a long time. I just purchased this excellent entry level Cordoba Fusion 5 Spruce model from the good folks at Sweetwater. The Fusion 5 is a very nice option for a hybrid nylon string guitar in that price range. I believe the Fusion 5 is a fairly new addition to the Cordoba line and based on the specs and… read more pricing I would say that it fits in well with their C5 models. Of course, it’s a Fusion model so you do get the narrower neck width and a radius fretboard, ideal for the steel string player wanting to add those sweet nylon string tones. I’m finding mostly pros vs cons with this guitar. The pros - good sound projection unplugged (although not as loud as my C7), beautiful fit and finish, excellent tone woods which include a solid spruce top, laminated mahogany back and sides, mahogany neck, a bone nut and saddle, Fishman electronics, very good playability and intonation up and down the very comfortable neck and good action right out of the box. The cons - I’m not too crazy about the use of composite material on the head plate and back center strip or the pearl style decals used for the head plate logo and rosette, but they don’t look bad at all and I suppose they do make sense at this price point. Honestly, I was considering the comparable Yamaha NXT1 but in my opinion Cordoba gives you more bang for your buck when you compare specs. I like having the mahogany instead of the nato found on the Yamaha. I also prefer the bone nut and saddle on the Cordoba. Also, I really just like the more “classical’ or “traditional” appearance of the Cordoba with 12 frets to the body and a round sound hole. In closing, I don’t think you’d be disappointed buying the Cordoba Fusion 5. I love mine.
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