Product: Terada RHD-28JT
Price Paid: US 1800.00 used
Submitted
11/27/2001
at
02:05am
by
Steve
Email: thesohns at lmi<dot>net
Features
:
9
Not sure of the year. This HD-28 was made by Terada of Japan. Apparently the story is that this was a model commissioned by, and made for, a high-end/vintage guitar dealer in Japan. They wanted a guitar that looked, sounded, and played like a war-time D-28 herringbone for their customers that wanted such an instrument to play out with, w/o the worries of taking out an irreplaceable vintage Martin. That said, this is as close to owning a war-time herringbone as I'll ever get. This guitar is built using solid Sitka Spruce for the top, and get this....SOLID Brazilian Rosewood back & sides! The neck is made of mahogany, with an ebony fretboard, and small diamond finerboard inlays at the 5th, 7th, 9th, 12th, and 14th frets. Frets are medium. It has a headstock volute. The headstock has a Brazilian RW veneer overlay w/ an abalone torch-type inlay. The tuning machines are imported Waverly-type copies. The finish is a thin nitro-cellulose lacquer. The soundhole has a D-28 type rosette around it, while the soundboard id surrounded by herringbone purfling. The top and back are bound in ivoroid. The endstrip is also ivoroid. A zippered backstrip adorns the chocolate colored, 75% vertical grained Brazilian Rosewood. The sides have the same rich color as the back and has 70% vertical grain. The bridge is ebony, with a time-period correct through-cut bone saddle. The nut is also bone. The pickguard is mock tortoise-shell with bevelled edges. All bracing is spruce, and the top bracing is a standard, or set-back X-design(not advanced-X). Because of the materials and the accurate portrayal of a '43 D-28 Herringbone, this guitar gets a 9 for features.
Sound
:
10
I play rock, pop, country, alt.country/no depression, hillbilly, rockabilly, and Christian worship songs. This guitar suits all those genres. When I plug in, I plug into whatever house PA there is, or my acoustic amp, a Fender KXR200. I have a Fishman Rare Earth Humbucking soundhole pickup installed. I use to run the signal through a DOD Acoustic 1 processor, a little noisy, that one. Now-a-days, I like to run it through a Trace Elliot TAG1 7-band acoustic guitar equalizer, and then a Digitech XP200 Modulator if I want any effects.
This guitar has a loud, open tone. Plenty of midrange, FULL & tight low-end, and clear but not overly-bright treble. A powerful sounding guitar...not a dainty sounding one! I believe the word used to describe this type of tone is 'CANNON'. I've owned a Washburn D10(my first guitar), a Taylor 810, a Taylor 812C, and a Martin D-18V. While they all sounded great...except the Washburn...this Terada really blows 'em away.
Action, Fit, & Finish
:
10
I bought this used so I don't know about the factory set-up, bought it seemed adequately set-up for my playing style when I bought it. The finish is a really beautiful nitro-cellulose lacquer. It was applied lightly, so this seems to contribute to the awesome tone. Interior bracing is flawless. No glue showing anywhere.
Reliability/Durability
:
10
This guitar has alreday stood up to live playing. I've always played w/o a back-up, had no problems. Finish is light, but will last. I can depend on this one.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had any contact with the Terada Co. Anyone out there who has? Please let me know how to contact them.
Overall Rating
:
10
Been playing about 11 years. My gear currently includes a Mesa Boogie .22+ Caliber, a Mesa Subway Blues, a Rivera-era Fender Yale Reverb, a Fender KXR200, a Fender James Burton Std Tele, an Epiphone Wildkat, a Ric 330 copy, a Peavey Impact Milano, & a Peavey Impact Firenza. Processing-wise, I have a Johnson J-station, a DOD Acoustic 1, a Digitech XP200 Modulator, a Trace Elliot TAG1 equalizer, a Danelectro TunaMelt tremolo, and two DOD OD pedals...Mystic Blues & Integrated Tube.
This Terada is THE one I'll NEVER part with. I love everything about this guitar. Tone. Looks. Durability. I hate nothing about it. My favorite feature is the fact that I was able to get a high-end HD-28(type) with SOLID Brazilian Rosewood back & sides, and a solid spruce top for under $2K! If it were lost or stolen, I never see another. These were never exported out of Japan. I'd have to fork over the BIG $$$s for a US-made equivelent.