Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
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Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: USD 1800 USED
Submitted 04/08/2009
at 12:57pm
by Moses
Features
:
8
I had the first run of the t5 made in 2005. I got a solid flamed maple top and i loved how it looked. The feel of the guitar is amazing. Tuners were superb. I couldn't put it down for the next couple weeks because every time i saw it i wanted to play it. I must say the pick ups are pretty versatile. The whole build of the guitar is just supreme. And the pick up switches made the guitar so useful in a lot of genres that it really lightens up your load.
Sound
:
7
One of the team members said that the t5 will not replace the 814ce or the gibson les paul and they were right. Although you can achieve a vast amount of sounds it will not give you that rich warm full bodied acoustic tone. The acoustic tone although it is somewhat impressive, it tends to sound a little thin. I mean there is no substitute for the sound of a full bodied acoustic. But i was impressed. just mess with the eq's for a bit and you can get some good acoustic sounds. The electric side of the t5 impressed me. First because this is Taylor's first attempt to make an electric and the sounds were not bad as i expected it to be. the single humbucker option is my favorite because it has in my opinion the most even response from the highs, mids and lows. The dual humbucker run in parallel can give you a fat tone but the lows can get pretty muddy so watch out for that. The dual humbucker run in series gives you the most fullest tone without getting too muddy. However it is a hybrid and you will not get a gibson tone or a prs. You may however achieve the spanky tone of a fender tele or strat with the right eq.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
Action is perfect. Pick ups were set up nicely. However you cant customize the pickups. The finish and the final touch ups were perfect. Overall setup was nearly perfect
Reliability/Durability
:
8
All instruments should be treated with care. With that being said the guitar is so light and i feel as if it could break with one wrong move. But i was proven wrong. I played a lot of gigs and its pretty sturdy. The hardware is tough. The finish however may take a beating but that is with all guitars. For taking it to a gig you might want to bring an extra 9 volt battery because you never know when the guitar will die out. This guitar's versatility will allow you to only bring one guitar per gig.
Customer Support
:
10
Nice people. Knows their stuff.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I've been playing guitar for about 10 years. I own a chet atkins sst, sg special and used to own a couple of taylor acoustics. Overall i love this guitar. Because the tones are so different from your traditional acoustic and electric it gives you a new pallet of sound to experiment with. The quality of this guitar is amazing i mean it is a taylor after all. This is an awesome guitar and recommend it for those who are looking to play in both worlds.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 01/23/2009
at 11:08pm
by MusicMan Joel
Features
:
No Opinion
Sound
:
No Opinion
I played the T5 last week at a store not plugged in, because I was short on time. I feel in loved with the look, feel and the action. I was very excited about the possibility of this one guitar for acoustic country rock, to Bob Dylan folk, to rock and blues, some Jazz. .
I perform weekly at a bar, doing a one-man band with looping devices, drum machine, and sometimes other musicians sit in. I wanted badly to love this guitar. And I was ready to pay big. I read all the reviews and thought bad reviews were do possibly overly picky reviewers.
I returned to the store and plugged in to a Fishman Bigbox and a small PA. I mainly wanted to check the Acoustic sound, because I'm moving toward a more acoustic set. I have a Taylor 114e, and play it though a PA, or Blues junior, Champ XD into the PA. I was very dispointed. The T5 acoustic sound was not satisfactory to take the place of my Acoustic electric Taylor.
After finding the acoustic sound unsatisfactorty and did not check the electric sound out very much. I did not like its sound compared to my Strat or Les Paul, but that could be improved with pedals. My goal was to find both kind of guitars in one. I wanted to record a loop rythem with an acoustic guitar, and then play electric lead over it, without changing guitars on stage. It really did not matter to me, how good the electric sound was since,i didn't like the acoustic sound.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
No Opinion
The best action, neck I could very ask for.
Reliability/Durability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I agree with other reviewers said who said this guitar has its own sound, and would not take the place of a good Acoustic guitar, or a Strat, Tele, LP.
The Taylor demo on Youtube the "acoustic" sound was way better than what I heard. I was unrealistic wanting this guitar to be great sounding acoustic and electric. The look feel, action every thing but the sound was super. I was disappointed cash in hand rerady to buy.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: 1600
Submitted 12/25/2008
at 04:27am
by Jeff Jones
Email: taketwoband<at>btinternet dot com
Features
:
8
Built in 2005. CMR Air Coil bridge pu, Dynamic Neck pu built in and Dynamic body sensor under body. 5-way switch and you can re-arrange the pu combinations if you want to play around with the plug-in connectors inside the body. Battery changes and access to electronics are ok but don't attempt a switch replacement or amp/equaliser replacement unless you are really skilled at these things!
Sound
:
8
Good choice of sounds but no single guitar will ever be 'master of all sounds'. I use a Roland GP100 sound processing system and that provides me with realistic acustic sounds when combined with the appropiate 5-way switch settings. Bridge pu will never get the guitar to sound like a Tele or Strat of course.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
Great action, well built.
Reliability/Durability
:
5
This may be the first '5' rating in this category but I've given '5' because two of the pcikups have failed! Currently only the CMR Air Coil bridge PU is working. I've read through lots of reviews and it seems this is not a general problem but, nevertheless, still disappointing for a guitar less than two years old.
Customer Support
:
6
Because of being non-US located support is not easy to get. The response form the Fender GB appointed Factory agent was prompt but they couild not help solve the problem without returning the guitar for repair. I'll have more to say on this after I've been through the repair process! It seems that I will have to pay for repairs. One year warranty is a bit mean!
Overall Rating
:
7
I fully support the comments about the non-electronics build, its very good and comparable with the Rick guitars. Neck action is excellent. Only negative is that intonation on the fifth and sixt strings (as usual) is out until you get to the fifth fret. Sadly, there is no adjustment for intonation, but I guess adding such a feature would turn the guitar into an electric.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/19/2008
at 08:55pm
by Flint
Email: flintc<at>knology dot net
Features
:
9
Features have been pretty well covered. Stacked bridge humbucker, hidden humbucker under the neck, internal transducer. 5-way selector switch. This is the koa top custom model.
Sound
:
9
While I like the array of sounds the T5 produces, I'll say that if you're expecting this guitar to sound just like your ES-335, your miked Martin, AND your Les Paul, you will be disappointed. The T5 has sounds all its own, which I find more useful for jazz/pop/blues through a tube amp than for hard rock or metal through a solid state modeling amp. But it's important to know that the T5 produces its own unique sounds, and is not going to satisfy you as a direct substitute for any other guitar.
Trying to characterize the sound in general terms probably isn't that helpful. I tried the maple top, spruce top, and koa top, and bought the koa. Very different personalities. Since I was aiming mostly at jazz, I found the maple a bit too sparkly. The koa is much more mellow.
However, since the T5 is a fully hollow body guitar, it is going to have feedback issues. At even moderate volumes, you won't want to wander on-axis of your amp. And the switch setting that couples in the transducer pickup must be handled with extreme caution.
In terms of overall sound, I would say that the acoustic properties stand out; you'll never mistake this for a solid body electric. It has a very sweet pure acoustic sound when not plugged in, but it's not loud enough for anything but quiet practice.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
7
When I bought mine, I looked at two of the koa model, both with straight factory setup. The first was not playable and couldn't be made playable. Tried cranking the neck, then unbolting and shimming the neck. Finally got the strings off the frets, but two of the pickups weren't working. Kind of worrisome.
The one I bought also had action problems; the low 4 strings were too high, and the B and E strings buzzed. So this one required a shim under the treble end of the bridge and a little neck relief, but these tweaks worked just fine, resulting in perfect action. The outer strings (E strings) are just a bit closer to the ends of the frets than on most guitars, easy to pull off the fret, so this takes just a bit of getting used to.
Beyond this, the fit and finish are flawless and deeply sexy.
Reliability/Durability
:
9
After a month of steady playing, there have been no reliability problems. Bear in mind, this is a hollow body acoustic-type guitar, very light weight and delicate.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No call for this yet.
Overall Rating
:
10
Now that it's set up, and because I enjoy the sound for what it is rather than for what I might have mistakenly expected, I join the group of players who just can't set it down. I never expected it to be a one-size-fits-all instrument ideally suited for everything from bluegrass to death metal.
The neck is very comfortable and effortless, the guitar is light, thin, balanced and easy to play. There's enough variation in the 5 available settings (and 2-band EQ) for every purpose I'd ever use it for. I find it quite versatile, bearing in mind that it's not going to sound like the traditional (and fairly narrow) selection of "acceptable" guitars for most styles.
If I could add one feature, it would be a notch filter. The feedback can be unexpected and quick!
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: USD 1950 USED
Submitted 04/14/2007
at 05:18pm
by Jason Brooks
Features
:
10
Sage Green Metallic with two top-mounted humbuckers and an under-neck pickup (no body sensor), otherwise a normal T5-S standard guitar. All of the hardware and appointments are 1st-rate... it's extremely well thought out and un-cluttered. The neck is on the wide side, but emminently playable and comfortable, with perfectly-dressed thin, low frets. 5-way switch and active boost/cut treble and tone controls give you TONS of sound options. The volume actually has a 6db boost past the detent position and does a great job of compressing the front end of a warm amp. You might not think it to look at it, but this guitar is loaded with everything you need.
Sound
:
10
Sounds are amazing... extremely versatile. I can nail tones from the best guitars I've ever played... my Ric' 360, Gretsch, 335, even my custom Strat. It goes from beautiful dark jazz to sparkling clean, thin highs, to full-tilt crunch and awesome fat lead tones. It doesn't have a body sensor, so it doesn't do the acoustic sounds like the single top-mounted pickup version. Everything it does it does extremely well... this is not a "do a lot of things marginally well" kind of guitar.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
I bought this guitar used at Gryphon Strings in Palo Alto, CA... This is a fantastic shop that hosted one of Taylor's road shows. I don't know if these guys set up the guitar, but it had an immaculate setup when I put my hands on it. The action was nice and low, the tension spot on for fast picking, finger style, etc., and the fit and finish were flawless. A supremely beautiful guitar.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
This thing is very light, BUT... it's put together very well. There is no doubt in my mind that this thing will stand up to anything I can throw at it.
Customer Support
:
10
Haven't had to call them, but the guys I talked to at the Taylor Road Show were super... they entertained a barage of questions with grace and enthusiasm. In the clinic were several previous Taylor-owners who've called the company, one of whom spoke to Bob Taylor, and all of them were supremely happy with their service.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for about 20 years and I've gotten rid of more guitars than I care to admit, including some custom Strats and Gibsons. Right now I'm down to a Clapton Strat, a Rickenbacker 360, a Carvin AE-185, a Guild Songbird, Tacoma DR-38 and a Dobro resonator, with about 5 or so 'lesser but good' instruments. Compared to anything I've ever owned, this guitar is easily the best made and well thought out. It's a gem and I'll sell my wife before I get rid of this guitar.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: USD 2400
Submitted 04/10/2007
at 05:30pm
by Larry
Features
:
10
I bought a new 2007 T5 Custom with a cocobolo top a month ago. Before I got it my Gretsch 57 DuoJet was my favorite. Now I can't put the T5 down for a minute!!
The finish is superb.
The body is perfect and comfortable
The tuners must've been made by Rolls Royce
The neck is like silk and glass and the action was perfect right out of the case (really cool looking faux alligator by the way)
Pickups are great and overall have a nice warm sound. But........when you need the crunch it delivers.
Sound
:
10
Likes are many........dislikes are none. I truly love this guitar. I have been an electric player for 40 years and this is the first acoustic I am 100% comfortable with.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Perfect right out of the box. It came with Elixer Nanoweb 11's. I imediately changed to Rickenbacker 10's......simply becaust I prefer half rounds/flat wounds.
Flaws? none....period.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
Looks delicate and feels so light compared to my Les Paul. Then again, my car feels light compared to the LP!
Haven't had it long enough to comment on the finish, but if it's like other Taylors, it should hold up nicely.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Have not had the opportunity to deal with them yet.
Overall Rating
:
10
Been playing for 40 some-odd years and been through about 60 or so guitars. This and my Gretsch 57 are my favorites to date.
I originally saw this when they first came out and from time to time would play one at a local GC. I said to myself "I gotta get me one of these one day".
A bit expensive for the Custom Cocobolo model. I'm sure the Std models play just as well.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: USD 2295
Submitted 02/07/2007
at 11:39pm
by Been there, done that.
Email: s<dot>yetter at gmail<dot>com
Features
:
8
'05 T5 Cherry sunburst Polyester UV cured gloss finish over solid flame maple double bound cutaway flat-top.
Made in El Cajon (CA).
2" body thickness (of red stained gloss Sapele); 16" across lower bout.
Deep red gloss finished bolt-on medium "C" shape mahogany neck with single bound ebony fingerboard and headstock; 15" radius; 21 medium frets; sealed chrome tuners.
Active electronics.
Came with a very nice faux-alligator hardshell case with 5 yellow metal latches (one locking).
Sound
:
9
I like the bright hybrid sounds: from shimmering "plugged-in acoustic" type sounds, to "airey" electric guitar sounds.
It is what I was looking for, coming from a more "vintage Telecaster through a tweed Deluxe" type sound, which was more primitive and midrangey, that I previously used for everything style I play. I wanted less midrange (though I like the crispness and intensity) and more high and "pretty" tones.
This is basically the trade-off I got too. So I'm pleased.
I did need to buy a better amp to take advantage of the range though.
For me, the T5 useful for: live Jazz; Showtunes & Pop; and acoustic rhythm jobs: using the supplied balanced cable with the XLR into A SWR California Blonde II amp.
I also use it straight into a Boss BR-900CD digital recorder for home recording with lots of versatility from gritty Blues sounds to "pretty" air pudding noodling.
It sounds pretty ghastly straight into my Allen Class Act class "A" tube amp. It will do a pretty convincing telecaster/tweed amp emulaton through the Allen (which is sort of a super "champ" concept), but it's harder to find that broad "sweet spot" when working it in a medium sized room. It's there, just not as easily accessible on the fly. It'll do Country and Blues well though, with the Allen.
The range of tones is pretty wide generally, though it doesn't have a whole lot of walloping midrange "punch" if you like say, Joe Walsh sounds from a P-90 LP Jr.
There can be some hum with a standard 1/4" cable in a noisy environment on some of the settings, but I've had no intrusive noise on jobs that I couldn't move around a little and make acceptable.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Here it flat out gets a 10.
The set up was perfect, and the playablity next to none. The neck is exquisite. Just right for me, though I have generally preferred big Nocaster necks lately. This isn't anything like that. It's like a fine Jazz guitar from the sixties, like a Byrdland or something.
The input jack worked loose over time. No biggie. Bears checking, as on most electric guitars.
Reliability/Durability
:
7
I love the concept of a bolt-on neck: no future expensive neck resetting will ever be required!
The T5 has tuning machines that are among the best I've ever experienced: no lash at all; and smooth as silk.
I was afraid the top needed a pickguard to protect its beauty, but it rubs out fine. I greatly prefer the feel of the Polyester finish to lacquer -which feels sticky to me- but I'm sure the T5's finish is harder.
It looks like a museum piece, but holds up to steady use just fine so far. I take pretty good care of my equipment: it is a hollow wood guitar after all, not a piece of diamond plate steel (or an ash Telecaster).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Original owner lifetime warranty against defect in materials etc etc.
Usual stuff.
The warranty card lists some general Taylor guitar care and feeding principles, for the ham-fisted ignoramuses who need them explained.
I have no experience with Taylor Guitars on customer support. They seem to have their own cheering section worldwide though, starting with their own suits. Impressive appearence of caring. I have not heard anything that gives me pause.
This is my first Taylor.
Overall Rating
:
9
47 years all styles guitar. I appreciate the versatility of this instrument's intended use.
It comes at a time when I'm gravitating towards versatility on the bandstand, and wanting to add some "acoustic" sheen to the sounds, generally.
If I'm their target, they hit it square: this is a great step forward for performance oriented guitars.
I'll say this: it's NOT your father's guitar!
When I was trying to find the "sweet spots" etc in my usual manner, developed over a lifetime of passive circuit high impedence phase relationship compromises and what sounded good to the powers that be (circa the fifties, when most electric guitar and amp "sets" manufacturing was ramping up and finding its market place), I frustrated myself.
I knew there were great sounds in there, but you can't expect a low impedence active circuit to give you your usual comfort zones of mush to soften the edges.
Even an Ovation through a tube amp (I've always hated piezo sounds) was understandable to me, but I prefered trying to get a more "acoustic" sound out of a Telecaster, which can be done somewhat in a live situation.
I never could understand why anyone would choose a piezo sound for recording though, if they didn't have to.
Over the years, I've tried or owned most types of popular electric guitars, from archtops to Reverends to Fishman Blender equipped Tacomas, as well as fine flat-tops and even acoustic only archtops.
But tastes change, and the public's perception of an acceptable so-called "acoustic" guitar sound has changed too (though not much in Bluegrass or Hawaiian Slack key circles).
The T5 isn't out to convince Bluegrassers OR heavy Rock players, IMHO.
But it does offer an old hand like me the opportunity to be as versatile as I want in the course of a live set, without changing guitars.
If I wanted to go for even broader versatility, I suppose I could A-B switch between my SWR and Allen amps, but I don't need distortion of the type I like at the jobs I play, so the SWR California Blonde amp carries the load all night for me.
I also like the unplugged tone and level fine too.
The active circuits don't react like passive ones, and the T5 Thinline will not react from the body like a thick slab bodied Hamer with P-90's. It's different.
I like this new modern guitar for the new millennium.
It's not the end of guitar development. They've just landed on the beach, and there's a whole Continent laying ahead, ripe for development.
Taylor has stuck a banner in the sand of that beach.
I'm sure it will spin off Jay Turser copycats. But it won't be the exquisite example of the guitar manufacturer's art the Taylor is.
Mine is an '05. It is now '07. I'm sure this ax can be bettered, but it does the job for me right now and for the foreseeable future (unless I get real rich real soon). At my age and declining activity level it could be the last guitar I'll need or want. I traded in most everything else I was using on it, and have since sold off the rest due to lack of use. I don't need or want that stuff anymore: too much compromise without redeeming user friendly simplicity.
I'm not going back to muddy sounding planks and snarky Ovations, thankyouvermuch. This thing has highs only my dogs can hear. I like that.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 01/09/2007
at 02:37pm
by rpguitar
Email: rpguitar at gmail<dot>com
Features
:
8
Features are well documented. I've had two T5's, a Standard with spruce top and body sensor, and a Custom with spruce top and double humbuckers. I sold the Standard and kept the Custom. Features are pretty robust, but could have more electronic options and better output flexibility, so it gets an 8.
Sound
:
9
Excellent, varied, and expressive instrument. But I take off one point because the tone controls are not as profound in their adjustments as they could be. Particularly treble; it's not possible to REALLY roll off the treble, like on a standard passive tone pot. The guitar handles different amps well, and has a personality with each one. I'm using it with a Fender Princeton Reverb (tube amp), an Acoustic Image Clarus/Redstone cabinet (jazz rig), and a Roland AC-60 acoustic amp.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
Pretty much impeccable, but in selecting my T5's, I played many - and there is quite a lot of variability, especially on the action. Some had high action, some low. Odd for this to be so disparate, after all, the saddle should be a standard component. Pickup heights are consistent, and all played well on the low frets (nut setup). Intonation is excellent. I have tried Elixir electric 11's (stock) and D'Addario XL 11's so far, and both sound and intonate well.
Reliability/Durability
:
9
The guitar is durable, but it's not a stone. It's an instrument made of wood. The battery seems to be a bit of a wild card, with only 40 hours of use prior to dying (per manual).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I'll give most of the substance of my review here.
I've been playing for 30 years and own 20+ guitars currently. I've owned over 40 in my life. I am fascinated by electric guitars with an acoustic personality. I love jazz archtops, semi-hollows, and hybrids of all kinds. So of course I had to check out the T5. It's a new flavor on the somewhat misled theme of "one guitar for all seasons."
Let's focus on that, because it's Taylor's marketing theme on the T5. All of the videos show rockers cranking out the distorto tones on their T5's. Taylor seems almost embarrassingly proud of its "Electric Guitar(tm)" as if it's the first company to make something like that. It's almost like the dorky kid realizing he's done something sort of cool for the first time, and not quite sure how to deal with it.
And herein lies the T5's curse: If you go into it with the expectation that this guitar is a jack of all trades, you will be disappointed. I see reviews where people call it a "crappy acoustic and a crappy electric" - and I cringe. True, it is not a full bodied acoustic, and it's not a proper electric guitar that a real overdrive junky would choose to sling if given other options.
BUT, it's a really interesting, unique, expressive instrument **in its own right**. Are you prepared for that? Taylor may not think that it can market the T5 with such a radical message, but this is what does it for me. The previous review states how the acoustic side never quite goes away, and this is true. And great! So it's all about expectations. If you are interested in your own voice(s), the T5 may be for you. And yes, it IS damn versatile too; perhaps 75% of the marketing promise is delivered.
One last thing... I discovered something fun about the T5 that I have not read anywhere else. The pickups are wired to the circuit board with plugs, so they can be easily removed in modular fashion. On the double humbucker T5, this is interesting... because you can SWITCH their positions, enabling other pickup settings. How about the middle humbucker alone? Or the middle and bridge together? Yes, we can do that. And for me, this unlocked the magic of the T5 even more, because I play in a jazz-oriented style. The sound of the middle bucker alone is much more "PAF-ish" than the oddly voiced under-neck pickup.
My switch is wired as follows: (1 = closest to neck)
1 - Neck + Bridge series
2 - Neck alone
3 - Middle alone
4 - Neck + Middle parallel
5 - Neck + Middle series
I am passing for now on the Bridge-only and Neck/Bridge series settings that are part of the stock wiring, opting instead for more variety of warm/dark flavors. The T5 is fairly bright to begin with, and rolling off the bass enables brighter sounds easily.
Feel free to email me with T5 questions or comments.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/21/2006
at 11:39pm
by fatcat
Features
:
No Opinion
Sound
:
No Opinion
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
No Opinion
Reliability/Durability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
I've been playing for 31 years, full-time pro for 23.
Like a lot of other reviewers have said, I really wanted to love this guitar. I spent quite a while with one at a local music store a few days ago. I played it through and acoustic amp, an electric amp and unamplified. The instrument played well enough and sounded good unamplified, but it just didn't do anything really well. The acoustic sounds were best but that's no great accomplishment for a Taylor. The electric side is where it needs to shine and in my opinion the T5 doesn't measure up. Everything that is supposed to be "electric" still has a acoustic vibe to it, even high-gain sounds. You can't get the standard electric sounds you need, only semi-reasonable facsimiles. I would be much more inclined to invest in a Fishman system for one of my electrics.
I have repeatedly found over many years that a guitar which is supposed to do everything rarely does anything exceptional. That's pretty much my bottom line on the T5.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: USD 1900
Submitted 08/29/2006
at 06:07pm
by Richard Stratton
Email: rstratton<at>bellsouth dot net
Features
:
9
The features are well documented on the Taylor website. Mine is a standard. I describe it as a hybrid guitar. It has a solid spruce acoustic guitar top with stylized F holes glued to a routed out piece of mahogany.
I give it a nine only because I think it needs an on board notch filter.
Sound
:
10
I've owned my T-5 Standard for about 9 months now. I bought it for band work but occaisionally I use it for solo work. I had been hauling 3 guitars to my variety resort gigs: a classical, a steel string and an electric. I play acoustic and electric classic rock and jazz. I also play classical but it doesn't do that of course.
For jazz I play it thru a Line 6 Pod thru the tube preamp with the compressor on, then thru a Trace Elliot Dual Compressor and a Trace Elliot Acoustic Preamp that has a notch filter - then out to the two AER Dominoes. If it's a small room I'll leave the Dominoes at home and play through an AER Compact 60.
For rock I also play thru a Roland Cube 30 from a Korg pedal tuner. It makes a great A+B box. The cube gives me all the vintage effects for the electric parts while the pod and AERs give me a great clean sound.
On the guitar I always turn the treble pot off and set the bass pot somewhere between off and in the middle. Otherwise there is too much presence and too much bass. I do the same thing with the tone controls on the Domino and the Cube. This helps control the feedback.
There is still plenty of high end.
With these two setups I can play jazz plus steel string and electric parts all with the accessibility of a solid body electric.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
I auditioned about 12 of these guitars and occaisionally thought I noticed a string balance problem: The first string was weak in volume on a few of them. For me the set ups were consistently too low: I had to shim the saddle and put 12's on mine before it really worked for me. It behaves like an acoustic guitar because it is one but I am able to get great electric sounds once the sustain issue is addressed with compression.
I had to ground the strings with aluminum duct tape from bridgeplate to lipstick pickup because I can't always be assured of a decent power supply. I was having hum problems in some environments. This is not the fault of the guitar.
This is an absolutely beautiful instrument and I really appreciate the piezo element that is not under the saddle - it is on the soundboard behind the bridge - the place where you would expect to find the warmest sound. The finish is beautiful. I need to put a tap plate on it so I don't trash the top.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
Very solid.
Just one thing you need to know: The battery light is on when there is a fresh battery. This is the opposite of most instruments that I've used where the battery light comes on when the charge is low. The light fades as the battery fades and eventually you'll get distortion. Carry an extra battery!
Customer Support
:
10
One of the tuners malfunctioned and Taylor sent me a new one in two business days. They are one of the finest companies for customer support.
I called and spoke to a tech a couple of times to get some basic questions answered.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing since 1967. Last year I played 250 gigs.
The T-5 has completly changed my act because I no longer have to change guitars to play all the styles that I cover. Variety is now from song to song, not set to set. I've always been dependent on at least three instruments and if I'd had the money for an archtop it would have been 4. I like to say that it has cured my schizephrenia.
While it doesn't replace my other instruments (which I still prefer on most solo gigs) it is a whole lot more practical. The timbral compromises are minimal and are off set by the convenience and the accessible upper fretboard. Also now it is possible for me to change from an acoustic tone to an electric tone and back again during the same song with this biamp setup.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/15/2006
at 08:16am
by Ian
Email: ian dot amores<at>gmail dot com
Features
:
10
I've been thinking about getting the Koa because it sounds so dang good and it looks pretty good, but still thinking whether the extra S$600 is worth the money.
Electronics are top notch and like all the other reviews, the T5 is RICH in features. I love the dual strap configuration idea though:)
Sound
:
10
Oh my goodness. The sound. The sound. I gotta admit, I was a bit biased walking into the local Taylor distributor, considering I walked in with the intention of loving the guitar, but sometimes, that makes the job of the guitar hitting the standard so much harder. But it did. It slammed my standards like nothing ever did. I haven't bought it yet, but I will, definitely. It's not an option for me, considering that the T5 hooked me the moment I walked in.
I play mostly Christian contemporary music, John Mayer and Jack Johnson, so obviously, I wanted to test out the acoustic sounds first. Bam. The crispness of the tone, the twang and the snap everytime you palm mute a great song is just indescribable. It totally fit the bill. Hit into John Mayer's "No such thing" and my friend beside me really thought that John Mayer practically walked into the building.
Tried out the electric functions with some recording studio digital tuning. I thought that the equipment they used was total nonsense(i'm a fan of analog), but even so, the electric sound will never replace a le s paul, but it comes close:)
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
It's a Taylor. The moment I put it in my hand, the thing felt like it was made for me. My hand slide up and down the neck like silk. It's really the dream neck to play with.
Like always, the fretboard and body is just amazing, especially the inlays with the T5 custom. Taylor sure knows how to make a guy drool for a guitar.
Take a look at the website if you don't believe me, it looks like that exactly. Heck actually, the one I saw, looked a heck of a lot better.
Reliability/Durability
:
No Opinion
Never tried it out for much so don't really have an opinion but it IS a Taylor and they are like the Army for guitars, so I don't really see much of a problem with it.
Would I gig without it? Nah, probably stay at home and sulk if I had to send it for repairs.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No idea, but from my friend's experience and from what I heard in the forums, it seems to me that Taylor actually loves its fan base.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for about 4-5 years, still relatively new to playing, and I love playing acoustic, but I've been getting more and more exposed to playing electric.
With sounds like switchfoot and christian contemporary mixing acoustic with electric, this guitar is the only one(the variax and the gibson doesn't come close), that is able to successfully feel like both an acoustic and an electric, as well as feel great in your hand.
The only thing I can say is, go out to your Taylor distributor and try it. Then I dare you, try not to think about it for more than 5 mins. I bet you you can't. Even if you hate the sound, you will love the looks of this guitar. I would live my entire life as a bachelor for this guitar.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $2700
Submitted 04/28/2006
at 10:12am
by Steve Hotra
Email: stevehotra<at>earthlink dot net
Features
:
9
I purchased a Koa T 5. The wood is a pretty site, and I get comments all the time. See previous comments regarding the specs, etc.
Sound
:
10
This is my 2nd review, after owning my T5 for 9 months. I pay this thru a Vox Tonelab SE, and then amp it with a powered Mackie 450, miked with a Shure SM 57. The T5 does create new tones, that vary from exisitng guitars, ( strats, tele's and Gibsons) I, like others have owned several in the past. Also, I own a 1999 Taylor 514 CE. The acoustic setting, the 1st position, is the hardest setting for me to dial into... until this past week. I went to a Taylor clinic, where I was able to hear 8 different Taylors, in one setting. What I found out, is that the T5 acoustic sensor pick-up, sound like a smaller body acoustic ( think concert body size) Once I understood this, I was able to customize my Tonelab SE to reflect the guitar. Alot of guitar players, play the T5 without any effects. It is a awesome guitar, that just sings. Plus, I love the fact that I can switch from 5 different settings in the middle of a set list. However, I won't be selling my older 1970's Fenders & Gibsons. The T5 is another unique guitar in itself.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
Awesome. I went to 9 gauge electric strings so I could bend notes better. This guitar does stay in tune!!
Reliability/Durability
:
10
I play at least 2x a week at my church. Don't know if I would buy another, unless it was used. This guitar, like all Taylors, are built to last.
Customer Support
:
10
If you haven't already, visit Taylors' website and look at the T5 guitar/configuration section. Its pretty cool.. you get to hear different amp settings, based upon the p/u. Very clever! The T 5 does sound like this, because I ahve played mine thru most of the amps they have listed. This is a great company, with excellent customer support and vision.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing a long time, and was led to submit a 2nd review. As always, these reviews are just opinions and should be viewed as such. I admit, the 1st time I picked up a T5 at my local GC, I was put off on how light it felt. But I was used to playing a Gibson 335 ES, which is almost as heavy as a Les Paul. But... as I have owned my Koa now for awhile, and I am really enjoying this guitar. I lead praise and worship for my church, and am asked to cover a wide variety of musical styles... the T5 can do this and more. I would recommend the T5 to anyone who is looking for a new sound. I was, and am thankful for companies like Taylor that put alot into R & D.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: trade
Submitted 04/08/2006
at 09:39pm
by If it makes you happy
Features
:
10
2006 model, sunburst, 5-way switch, bass and treble volume, single cutaway, thin neck, nice case.
Sound
:
10
I play rock and the blues, dabble in most everything else. I use it with a Vox AC30 and a Marshall JTM30, with a CryBaby wah a Sex-Drive clean boost and a Big Muff Pi. Lots has been written about this model, pro and con. The acoustic tone is ok, competitive with anything else you can buy on an electric guitar, and I have never heard any acoustic with a built in preamp that I like. Unplugged it is passable. I think that a lot of reviewers are missing the point of this guitar. They seem to want it to be a replacement for a Strat or a Les Paul or whatever, tonewise. If you want a Strat or LP, that is what you should buy. This guitar offers its own sound, and while some of its tones are in the neighborhood of a Strat or LP, audition it on its own merits. When you buy a humbucking equipped guitar, you know well beforehand what it is generally going to sound like, whether its a Gibson, Hamer, Music Man, PRS, whatever, it is going to usually have three tones and everyone who plays know what they will sound like. Same thing with a Strat or any of the 500 Strat knockoffs available, no matter how much you pay. The T5 is, to my ears a real alternative. The 5 tones are completely its own, and offer a whole new sound. The tone controls are active, and just a slight adjustment really changes the sound. This is what makes this guitar shine, in my opinion. In any given switch position, varying the tone controls gives you a huge range of sounds, and picking anywhere from the neck to way back over the bridge adds more flavors. This guitar is a tremedous addition to your stable of guitars. Constant experimentation yields more great tones, and it is the single most versatile guitar I have ever played. It isnt meant to replace your favorites, its meant to give you a huge new amount of tonal options. It really will play almost all kinds of music. I am not a metal head, and I dont think it will do that very well, if at all, but for rock and country and even jazz is is as good as it gets. I cant strees how much I like it and am impressed by it. Keep an open mind and enjoy what it gives you. The only drawback I find is that, like all hollow bodies, feedback is an issue to contend with. The previous reviewers who say that there are no good sounds or rate the sound as a "1" leave me only to wonder in puzzlement.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Well, here is where Taylor really shines. They take a back seat to no one in quality and finish, and it is because they care about every instrument they sell, as opposed to that outfit in Nashville. You can really tell when a company is making the effort. Everything on this guitar is absolutely first rate, nary a flaw to be found. Even the Elixir strings are better than I thought they would be. What a treat to buy a new guitar and NOT have to leave it so the store tech can fix all the crap thats wrong with it. Great fretwork, very light and comfortable, it suits me perfectly, as if I had designed it myself. Typical Taylor playability, which is unsurpassed.
Reliability/Durability
:
No Opinion
Dont know yet, but I expect it will last fine.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No experience at this, but Taylor really is customer friendly with all the literature they put out, and have a good website. The instruction " manual" they give you with the guitar is a DVD with the designers from Taylor demonstrating the guitar.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for over 40 years, and I have just recently gotten serious again. I traded two nice electrics for this Taylor, and some of the sales staff thought I was nuts, but I couldnt be more pleased. I have had it, for the time being, with the Fender and Gibson sound, and wanted something else, although I still have a trusty Strat around. I just cannot put this guitar down, and isnt that the way you should feel about a new guitar? I have bought three new Gibson hollowbodies in the past two years, and all three( they came from the plant in Memphis) were the poorest quality new guitars I have ever seen. Completely unplayable from the factory, and two of them, ES335s, should never have been shipped, the fit and
finish were so deplorable. They were all disposed of hastily, and I have learned my lesson, albeit slowly, regardless of the million excuses Gibson offers. The T5 is from another world, no excuses necessary. If you are looking for something rerally versatile and different, try one.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $2200
Submitted 03/29/2006
at 09:27am
by Mr. Henry
Features
:
10
Bought it in September 2005 paid about 2200
Spruce top with honey sunburst finish.
You all know the specs.
Sound
:
10
Sounds awesome! I'm a worship leader at church. Use it with full band and it can do both acoustic and electric - it rocks. I wasn't going to write a review but then I saw the one where the guy said it wouldn't stay in tune. My experience has been the complete oposite. I've been playing for 30 some years and (maybe 'cause I'm mainly an acoustic player) I've never had an electric that would stay in tune for me after playing leads and bending strings. The T5 does. It's awesome It's always in tune with just normal minor adjustments. So, I don't know maybe he got a lemon! But I'm a real nut about being in tune and this baby stays in tune!! 'nuff said.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
It has a wonderful setup. I bought my from Sweetwater sound and I know they go over them pretty good. I've played a few at the local music stores and the action seemed a little higher than mine.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
I play this guitar every Wednesday, Friday and Sunday with a band and it does it all. I'm just runing it though a Keeley Compressor and into and acoustisonic junior amp. Can I depend on it. I do depend on it - it's the only guitar I'm playing out with now. I own a Martin 0028EC and a Larivee LV05 and I always seem to reach for the Taylor on the way out the door.
Customer Support
:
10
I've called them a couple of times with little stuff - they were very helpful
Overall Rating
:
10
If this guitar were lost or stolen I'd cry! and then buy another one.
I wish I had another one!
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $1895
Submitted 02/06/2006
at 02:13pm
by Grizz
Email: blues dot scale<at>verizon dot net
Features
:
9
Read the website at Taylor. It's great. This is what an acoustic/electric should be.
Sound
:
10
I play Jazz, blues and country -- suits them all fine. Good selection of pickup configurations.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Very well setup, plays like a strat.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
It's a Taylor! Good solid strap buttons, heavy duty tuners. Just bring an extra battery or two and you can gig forever.
Customer Support
:
10
Taylor has the lifetime warranty and their website is very informative.
Overall Rating
:
10
Been playing forever. Though very unique, it does what it says it does and adds versatility without giving a lot of stuff you can't or wouldn't want to use (I'm thinking about some of the junk patches on certain guitar synthesizers.). This is a great guitar.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/06/2006
at 04:24am
by Jon
Email: jonfields45 at yahoo<dot>com
Features
:
9
Spruce top, sunburst finish
Sound
:
5
I wanted to like this guitar. I did a long try out at the local music store yesterday using a Taylor 414 and an Ibanez Artcore Semi-hollow body (2 humbuckers) as references, through a Fender Blues Jr and the top of the line Marshal acoustic amp. I own several Martin dreadnoughts, a few low end Taylors, a Gibson ES-335 and a 70s Fender Strat. I was looking for a good acoustic tone and usable electric tones out of that pallette (i.e. classic double humbucker or triple single coil). The acoustic tone did not come close to the 414 and was not, to my ear, only a little better than a well equalized piezo (if you are interested in a cheap way to get a great acoustic sound out of a piezo check out the Beringer ADI21) on solid body (Carvin AE-185, Fender Nashville Power Tele, Parker Fly, etc.). On the electric side, the two pickups in series was the most usable, and a unique tone, but did not cover any of the double humbucker or triple single coil bases. Bottom line, if you like it buy it, but it is not cheap and does not substitue for my other guitars.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
This guitar was perfectly built.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
I did not buy and can't comment, but I see no reason it won't be as dependable as my other Taylors, which means no backup needed.
Customer Support
:
10
Never dealt with them on a problem. Did send them some comments on a Taylor Baby I bought a few years ago and got a thoughtful reply.
Overall Rating
:
5
If this guitar did one thing killer well (Strat, Les Paul or Taylor ES on real acoustic) I would love it, but doesn't.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $2899
Submitted 01/31/2006
at 10:51am
by Larry Hager
Features
:
10
Taylor T5 Koa Top, I just can't tell you what a fantastic guitar this is. I can imagine how I got along without it.
Sound
:
10
I use a Behringer ULTRACOUSTIC ACX1000 Amp and a old Crate amp and it sounds amazing, between the 5 way switch and the amp controls I can make a huge number of sounds with this guitar. the active controls are sweet.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
When I first got the guitar out of the case I started playing it without any amps and it sounded great,I just played it for hours alone in my home. The action felt great and even with some of the hard playing that I do it stayed in perfect tune. This guitar is flawless Taylor should be proud of their work. By the way I think I sold a few of these guitars for you just by playing for some friends of mine.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
I couldn't imagine using anything else when I gig.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I haven't had the need so I have no clue
Overall Rating
:
10
I have been playing for some 25 years and there are some amazing guitars out there and this one is right up there with them.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $1800
Submitted 01/28/2006
at 06:40am
by Rick
Email: gnosisnh at charter<dot>net
Features
:
10
S/A
Sound
:
9
I play my T5 in stereo through an Acoustic Image Series III Clarus 2R Head w/ two Raezers Edge Cabs (Stealth 12 and a Stealth 10ER)...AND an AER Compact 60. The 10 and the AER are off the ground with the 12 on the floor. The 10 on one side, the AER and the 12 on the other. Simply put: It just doesn't get any better than this when it comes to a clean sound...the AER really allows the mids to cut through the mix. I'm mostly a jazz player but have a lot of fun playing rock too. For rock, this set-up also works great with my Fulltone pedals: Fat Boost, Drive 2 and an MXR 90. My Gibson CS 336 is also amazing through these amps, although for rock, I combine the AER with my Top Hat Club Royale. The T5 is my main guitar...and I REAlLY love the Gibson.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Perfect...absolutely beautiful guitar. The frets need to be smoothed out a little on the edges, but thats easily fixed. I just love the way this guitar feels; I have really bad shoulders and comfort is everything (next to sound) for me.
Reliability/Durability
:
9
Postion 3 (humbucker) and 5 are noisey...I'm sure this can be fixed. The other positions are dead quiet. Very solid guitar.
Customer Support
:
9
No need yet...great reputation.
Overall Rating
:
10
Playing 40 years, have owned Strats, ES 347, Godins, Martins, Vintage Epiphone Riviera (very nice) and many others. The T5 is my favorite. I can see how it's a "hate it" or "love it" guitar. If you approach it as a unique guitar with several unique sounds you'll love it. If you want it to sound "exactly like" whatever, you may want to buy those guitars. The accoustic sound provides the majority of the controversy. Try the first setting (accoustic) through the AI Clarus and an AER and I'd be surprised to hear from anyone who isn't absolutely blown away by the accoustic qualities of the T5...especially the spruce-top for me.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $1800
Submitted 01/25/2006
at 04:36am
by Rle
Features
:
9
Spruce Top Standard, tobacco burst. The features are covered in other posts. Excellent features.
Sound
:
10
For what this guitar was designed to do the sound is great. I can get a very nice acoustic tone and go all the way to hard driving distortion.
I play my T5 through a Bose PAS and that is a good combo. But I like this guitar through all the electric and acoustic amps I have the chance to use. Also, it sounds good straight into a standard P.A.
The T5 system seems to be able to take advantage of many outboard effects.
I wanted one guitar to take with me gigging that could do it all. I have been looking for a couple of years and this is the guitar that does it for me.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
Excellent fit and finish. Well built and plays like butter. Set up well from the factory.
I should give the guitar a 10 in this category but I reserve that for hand built instruments.
Build and quality is excellent.
Reliability/Durability
:
9
Well built, reliable, stays in tune well. Excellent quality.
Customer Support
:
10
I've owned a couple of Taylors and dealt with the company on a couple of issues. They are the best.
Example: I owned a Taylor 814CE. The electronics cut out from time to time. Taylor sent out a brand new set of electronics the next day air and paid for installation. Outstanding!
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for about 40+ years. I'm mostly an acoustic guy, play some bluegrass and I am very picky about acoustic sound. This guitar does not sound like my Goodall through a mike but it does a great job of producing an acoustic sound that I like. It certainly does a better job in the acoustic sound than many of the under the saddle piezo pickups that I've heard.
If lost or stolen, I would have to replace this guitar as I use the T5 now the most.
Overall, I love the sound, playability, fit, finish.. All my die hard acoustic friends love the sound as well..that's a stellar recommendation.
Finally, I don't own a lot of axes. I find what I want and wait until I can afford it and buy what I want and need. This guitar was definitely worth the wait and price.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $1999
Submitted 01/12/2006
at 05:29pm
by offblue
Features
:
10
You folks all know the features by now so I won't waste disk space.... I got the black standard model that is absolutely a sweetheart.
Sound
:
10
Amazing tones. I am using my T5 to record with and to write songs with. Unbelievable, full, sweet tones that sound so good I am amazed. Incredible sustain. Doesn't sound like a full acoustic, it sounds better. Amazing guitar.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Not a blemish on my T5 - the black finish is beautiful and the guitar is just a perfect 10 in every way. Unbelievable workmanship from the fine folks at Taylor.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
This will withstand both live playing and recording for many years. Solid as a rock, dependable, with a finish that could grace a Bentley.
Customer Support
:
10
The best - period.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing since 1961 - yes, before the Beatles hit America. I've spent a lifetime playing my original Guild Thunderbird and several different Martin acoustics. I picked this up in December on a whim and the thing is just amazing. It's got a voice of it's own that I will never give up. It's all about the player finding oneness with his instrument and this did it for me. The people who are talking smack about this guitar either, 1. For some reason got a lemon - or 2. Don't know jack about tones but bought this thinking it would make them an overnight success. Don't work that way people. It takes dedication and practice and it also takes forgetting about G.A.S. and being honest with yourself. To those of you who talk trash about the T5 I say you need to get real.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $2899.00
Submitted 11/19/2005
at 10:53pm
by Rozy
Features
:
9
very classy, Just got today and put it through it's paces. I love it! Action is great and book match is excellent. I got the koa top and it's wonderful.
Sound
:
9
It does it all. I couldn't be more impressed if I had built it myself.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
Perfect! THis sums it up! I also have a prs custom 24 artist package. both great guitars, but I think Paul Reed Smith himself would be impressed.
Reliability/Durability
:
9
seems very well put together. I would trust it very much. With all the pick ups, I would have a back up battery.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Don't know yet. But the way this thing looks built, I don't think repairs will be somthing needed very much.
Overall Rating
:
9
have not been playing that long, But I know Quality When I see it or play it. This guitar is very obvious. The koa top was a little spendy, But it's beautiful.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: 2990 (Australian)
Submitted 11/16/2005
at 12:42am
by Glenn Jones
Features
:
9
Mine is a solid spruce top in honey-burst. The body is hollowed out sapele block and the neck is mahogany. The pick-ups are an interesting arrangement with the single humbucker at the bridge in a lipstick style housing, an internal body sensor about two inches behind the bridge and a humbucker sensor behind the neck housing. The top is a lesson in design elegance with three small matt dials on the upper bout for volume, treble and bass. The five-way selector is on the top edge. The neck is beautifully shaped and the nut and bridge are made of bone. The T-5 gets a 9 because I am sure there is perfection somewhere but in the meantime this is the next best thing.
Sound
:
9
Wow! It does acoustic, it does blues and it does searing electric solos. All it takes is a change of position selector and a change of amp channel. The T-5 is that good. To the guy who says it is only worth a 1, why on earth did you buy a guitar you don't like? Especially one so expensive! I tried the Chet Atkins, an Ovation thinline and even a Fender Acoustasonic. None come close to the T-5 for versatility, sound or feel. Yes, it sounds like a real acoustic. I know it is not going to project like a dreadnought, but how anyone can say it sounds thin is byeond me.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
9
The unit was perfect straight out of the box. Everything fits together extraordinarily well. From the single bolt neck to the laser cut sound holes, it all looks great. It comes with a set of 11s fitted, including a plain non-wound third string. It feels like and electric but sounds like an acoustic unplugged. My only criticism is the amount of lacquer on the neck. I have a personal preference for the Fender-style satin-feel maple neck. If the T-5 had sucha finish I wold have given it a 10. Still, maybo Taylor will offer this as an option at some point in the future and I can upgrade.
Reliability/Durability
:
7
Everything is solid as a rock and the hardcase should ensure that it stays that way. I am nervous about the durabilty of the finish - but only because it looks so great and costs so much!
Would I use the T-5 on a gig without a backup- I won't be gigging the T-5 because it is too damned expensive to risk it. Sorry Taylor, but mine is a home body until you bring out a down-market version I can afford to risk in a public place (one with a satin maple neck - hint!)
Customer Support
:
9
I bought mine from a local dealer and Taylor agent. I know and trust them so I have no doubts.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have beeb playing the goof, the bad and the ugly for more than 40 years and the T-5 is the best guitar I have ever owned. Even better than my PRS.
My only wish is that I could have got the red edgeburst, but there wasn't one to be had anywhere in Australia (I called around) and the honeyburst was my second choice. As I have already mentioned, the satin-feel maple neck and a downmarket version for public appearances are both on my Taylor wishlist.
What do I love about the T-5? The sounds, the feel, the playability, the look, the....just about everything really! What do I hate? Nothing! If I felt so bad about a feature that I hated it, then I wouldn't buy the guitar, especially one so expensive.
Which brings me back to the previous writer who rated the sound so poorly! I don't dispute your right to have an opinion and express it. I am just left to wonder why you would buy something like a musical instrument when you dislike the sound so much. I can understand buying a car and disliking the exhaust note. The sound is simply a by-product of buying a means of transport. But one only buys a guitar for the sound it makes - unless you buy it to look at it and not play it? If you are so unhappy with your T-5, I am sure there will be many who will be only too happy to take your T-5 off your hands.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $2000.00
Submitted 11/14/2005
at 06:23pm
by not happy
Features
:
8
Sound
:
2
Darn thing will not stay in tune!
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
2
Won't stay in tune!
Reliability/Durability
:
2
Will not stay in tune. Can't play one set wiihout it going out about a whole step...
Customer Support
:
1
didn't solve the problem!!! Taylor said it was the strings so I tried changing the strings (numerous times)...to no avail!!! KTaylor say it was a problem with elixir... Called elixir who didnt have a clue about the problem!!!
Overall Rating
:
2
This guitar is pretty much useless...Taylor didn't seem to care. I have three Taylors...thinking of switxhing to Martin or another company that will take care of it's loyal customers.
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/10/2005
at 01:12pm
by Johnny Kidd
Features
:
10
Recently purchases the T5-C1 red edgeburst, maple top. Simply beautiful, well matched and very classy looking.
Everyone knows the specs on the five way with the "Active EQ" in the treble and bass knobs.
Venetian cutaway is beautiful, although fret 21 is a bit of a reach.
All T5's come with cases, the faux croc is just fine.
Sound
:
9
This is a hybrid guitar and it hits high marks in all sounds. I play 2001 Taylor 414ce & Takamine EF349 and Gibson SG Standard & Epiphone Les Paul and this guitar sounds like none of them. While SG is a hard body cruncher, the T5 lends itself to a jazzier riff rather than a 260 bpm shredder. When used with Fender acoustasonic Junior (acoustic amp w several Boss peds - Chorus and Compression) I get as close as I need to an acoustic sound. I A/B into a Fender HotRod Deluxe using a Pandora PX3 effects and I can get pretty crunchy stuff out also.
Very different tones based on which top you get - spruce is very bright, while Koa soars with creamy tones up and down. Play all three - I chose the Maple as it split the difference.
You must work the guitar's EQ along with the 5 way to settle in to your sound. Each setting combined with effects and amp used will require tweaking the EQ to get to your sweet spot.
I've had it for three weeks and it has added plenty to a sound that I was anxious to contiue developing.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
Action is great, I am sliding up and down the ebony fingerboard like lightening and have had no issues.
Neck is a tad small with 11/16" width at nut, but not at all uncomfortable or crowded. Slightly short \scaled makes even easier playability.
Finish is flawless and is breathtaking to those who haven't seen a first rate guitar (blood red flamed maple is pretty awesome to look at coming out of the case)
Gold hardware is a special touch and the artist inlays are visually stimulating to the player
Reliability/Durability
:
10
Careful with no pickguard, but modified flatpicker that I am, I end up doing a lot of picking to embellish the strum
No expectation that this will be any less durable than my other Taylor, barring my own negligence. This one stays in the case - no stands!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
9
I don't know about "fantastic value" in the $2000+ range - but you get your moneys worth!
Fulfilled my GAS for a hollow body electric that doesn't play as "hot" as an SG but can also create very interesting acoustic blends that my audience finds very enjoyable
Product: Taylor Guitars T5 Thinline
Price Paid: US $1800
Submitted 11/04/2005
at 12:59pm
by Joe
Features
:
10
Brand new with spruce top. 5 way accoustic-eleactric pup switch. Ebony neck - Blueburst. A beautiful guitar.
Sound
:
2
I really wanted to love this guitar. It was beautifual and played great. However, it does not sound as good as my Gibson j185 acoust or any of my electrics. As an acoutic it was a bit weak and the electric sounded alot like an acoustic guitar with an electric HB installed. Also, the acoustic-electric amplification set up required lifting the ground on one of the 2 amps. I can see that going real wronng when playing live and you switch guitars.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
No Opinion
The action fit and finish are top notch.
Reliability/Durability
:
No Opinion
I returned it after a week so I can't say.
Customer Support
:
10
I had a load hum coming from my amp. I called and got immediate assistance. I was instructed to lift the groend on my fender vibrulux. This got rid of the hum but I was concerned the I would forget that the groundless adapter was on the amp and my amp would be at risk.
Overall Rating
:
2
For the reasons stated above, I reluctantly returned it. I knew that I would end up using my other acoustic and electric guitars for superior sound despit the convenience of just using one guitar as two. I expected much more given the Taylor reputation and reviews. You could do much twaeking to make it sound better but is still a beautiful instrument that doesn't do it all. It then caost me $35 to return it to Music 123.
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