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Leo Jaymz 6 Strings Headless Electric Guitar - Full Scale Travel Guitar - Alder Body and 5 piece Maple Neck - Optical Color Changing Paint - Customized Pickups (llusory color)

  • Based on 52 reviews
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Color: llusory color


Features

  • Alder body with Optical color changing paint,very good appearance and sound.
  • 5 piece maple/mahogany neck for better stability.
  • Small size and ergonomic design, suitable for home, travel, picnic, party and other places.
  • Ebony fingerboard,Stainless steel rounded end frets and LeoJaymz's unique fingerboard inlay
  • Nut width:41.6mm,12 fret width:52mm,end fres width:57.1mm
  • Scale: 25.5 (648mm),fingerboard radius:15''(381mm)

Description

Leo Jaymz Headless Guitar


Brand: Leo Jaymz


Color: Llusory color


Top Material Type: Maple Wood, Mahogany Wood, Alder Wood, Ebony Wood


Body Material: Alder


Back Material Type: Alder


Neck Material Type: Maple


Fretboard Material Type: Ebony Wood


Guitar Pickup Configuration: H-H


String Material Type: Stainless Steel


Hand Orientation: Right


Item Weight: 10.73 pounds


Package Dimensions: 35 x 15 x 4 inches


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: LJBK-001


Date First Available: February 20, 2023


Back Material: Alder


Body Material: Alder


Color Name: Llusory color


Fretboard Material: Ebony Wood


Guitar Pickup Configuration: H-H


Scale Length: 25.5 Inches


String Material: Stainless Steel


Top Material: Maple Wood, Mahogany Wood, Alder Wood, Ebony Wood


Neck Material Type: Maple


Number of Strings: 6


Guitar Bridge System: Adjustable


Material Type: Alder Wood


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • An Absolute Abomination of a Guitar - See Updated Review on Replacement
Color: Brown
5/1/2023 Updated Review. Replacement guitar arrived and this one is almost perfect. It had a loose nut on the tone pot and one buzzing string at the nut. All of this took about 5 minutes for me to fix. The neck relief was set, string radius matched the fingerboard and the intonation was set. String height at the 12th fret was 1.5mm for both E strings and there is room to bring it down a bit if I want to. Saddles are locked to the bridges and the tone pot actually has a nice taper unlike the first guitar. Didn't even have to adjust the setup. Tuned it up and played it. Oddly enough these pickups sound better even though the DCR matched the first guitar. Perhaps there was more going on with the first guitar than I was aware of. Anyway, I'm happy with this one and will keep it. This proves that Leo Jaymz can get you a decent guitar that is playable out of the box. It may take a replacement or two and some patience, but it will happen. Hang in there. Docking 2 stars because the first guitar experience should never have happened and no one deserves that. 4/27/2023 Original Review. This review is about the guitar that I received. I truly hope that you get a better one. This one is absolute garbage. I ordered the brown version and it is a beautiful guitar. I really wanted to love it, but things went wrong fast. The controls all are crammed together. There is plenty of room to space them out, so not sure why they thought that was a good idea. Just be aware of that. Could be an issue if you do volume swells without hitting the pickup selector. Also note that the output jack is located in a bad position. This makes playing the guitar in the classical position very uncomfortable because of the cable, even if it's angled. Many of these guitars have the output jack located on the end of the guitar below the treble e string bridge. Not sure why they put it where they did on this guitar. Obviously they are not guitar players and are just more or less copying a design. Lets start with the packaging. Very good. The guitar comes in a foam bag, inside a nice gig bag. That is then packed in a nice box and then another nice snug fitting box. Unfortunately Amazon throws it in a giant box with no paper or protection at all. So everything bounces around in that during shipping. That is on Amazon, not Leo Jaymz. This guitar should never have left the factory and the fact that this is a budget guitar does not get them a pass. That time is gone. These budget guitar companies have proven that they can and do make some fine guitars. So we, the consumers, need to hold them accountable for doing just that. Don't make excuses for them. This guitar is garbage. I don't expect premium components, but I do expect a fully functional and playable guitar out of the box. Anything less than that from any manufacturer is unacceptable. I set up all 55 of my guitars so doing a setup is just part of the experience. I don't count doing a setup against any brand. This guitar comes with 6 different sized allen wrenches that you will need to keep track of. They couldn't standardize on 3 sizes or so, they just went with whatever. Oh, the allen wrenches are just like the bridge. Very soft metal and easy to strip. There was absolutely NO quality control at all. Zero. There is a gouge in the lower front of the guitar. The side markers on the fingerboard were installed in an uneven, crooked and haphazard fashion. The nut slot for the bass E string is cut in the wrong location which causes a kink in the string. It's a zero fret guitar, but it still has a slotted nut to keep the string spacing right. There was no attempt to intonate the guitar. All of the saddles are installed in a straight line. Additionally, the saddles are set at random heights that don't make any sense. They should have been set to the fingerboard radius (15") or at least close. Nope. It's a washboard. Even after adjusting the truss rod and setting the action to spec, the lowest string height that I could get was 2.70 mm at the 12th fret. That's with both of the E saddles sat as low as possible. It's crazy high. That means a neck shim is required to bring the action down to within reasonable specs. That is ridiculous for a new guitar out of the box. I've shimmed guitar necks before, but was able to at least get them playable before that. The bridge is quirky, but livable if the adjustments actually worked. The metal is really soft and it's easy to damage and strip the screws and screw heads. I mean REALLY easy to strip. There are six individual bridges mounted to a base plate. There are small diagonal screws in the front of each bridge. The purpose of these is to lock the saddle in place once you set the saddle height. The problem is that no matter how hard you tighten these, the saddles still fall out. It's seems like they didn't drill the holes all the way through the bridges to allow the screws to work properly or didn't thread the holes all the way. Eventually the screw heads just strip out. Since you can't tighten these screws, the saddles rattle and create a buzzing/sitar effect. The remaining adjustments are relatively straight forward. Two screws in the top of each saddle let you adjust the height and angle to get the saddles level and make sure string spacing is consistent. Similar to a Strat saddle. Intonation is done by removing the string to access the adjustment screw that attaches the saddle to the base plate. Loosen that and then slide the entire bridge back and forth. They are slotted on the bottom. Tighten the screw down, put the string back on, tune it up and check intonation. Repeat for each string. It sounds time consuming, but it actually goes pretty fast because of how easy it is to get the strings loose. The tuners work fine. They need a good oil and to be worked. Since all of the adjustment knobs are so close together, it is easy to knock one string out of tune when you are tuning another string. Once set, they hold tuning well and are pretty easy to turn with your thumb and forefinger. They give you an allen wrench that fits in the rear of the knobs, but I didn't need it. The pickup wires are exposed by the bottom height adjustment screws so be careful not to damage those when raising/lowering the pickups. There is a small strip of foam right in the middle of each pickup. It's not enough to adjust the pickup heights and when you try to raise them, they just flop around. So you have to deal with that and will need to add foam or springs. Pickups are weak and sound bad no matter what preset I use on my amp or which amp I try. I also found a stray bare copper wire coming out of the side of the bridge pickup. Bridge DCR measured 11.86k and neck DCR measured 10.97k. The electronics are about as cheap as you can get. Dime sized pots. Volume knob has good taper, but the tone knob is more or less an on/off switch. The 3 way switch is sealed, but works fine. I don't know why they used a 3 way lever instead of a 3 way toggle. A toggle would have given you a little more room. Neck is very nice and the fretwork is decent. No sharp or rough fret ends. Plenty of fret rock, but nothing that seems to affect playability. They do need a polish. This was an absolutely disappointing customer experience. What's sad is that I have ordered 2 other Leo Jaymz guitars and they have been perfectly fine out of the box. Not this one. Also when I checked their website, this guitar is not even listed and there is no documentation available for it. So they are either new or they're garbage and they are trying to get rid of them. This guitar has many issues. I can correct all of these because I'm a tech and a builder, but the novice folks are going to be stuck with a really bad guitar. If you were to take this guitar to a tech for a setup, repair and replacement of the pickups/electronics, you are looking at over $150 easy. That puts you in the range of other options like the Latitude or EART guitars. Even the Harley Benton Dullahan from the U.S. Distributer is a better buy, but more expensive. Since I really want a good one, I have asked for a replacement instead of a refund. I'm hoping that I just got the odd really bad one and that the next one will be right. I'll come back and update this review after that guitar arrives. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2023 by SNAFU

  • A pretty decent guitar with a little bit of work
This is probably premature to write a review after owning it for 12 hours, but here goes... I have played guitar since the late 1980s, went to college for music, and I am good at working with my hands and with tools. I'm not a professionally trained guitar repair tech or builder, but I can do a decent setup job, fret leveling and polishing, soldering, etc... This can be a fun guitar with some setup work. I like bargain-projects though if I can take something affordable that's okay as a starting point and make it good... So here is what I did thus far: 1. String height/action adjustment. Strings were fairly high when it arrived. The bridge was confusing at first until I removed one of the saddles to see what the two set screws do... one rotates the brass piece in one direction to adjust the saddle height, and the other locks it in place once you get it where you want it. This bridge seems to be the same style that most of these sub $400 headless guitars use, and it's not hard once you see how it works. Adjusting intonation is relatively easy, and what's nice with this bridge (as opposed to what is on my Agile Chiral headless) is that the tiny screw that locks in the intonation, doesn't need to fight against the string tension, which is good in my opinion. 2. truss rod. The neck was pretty straight, but adjusting the truss rod is super easy if you need to. 3. frets. there was one spot with a fret that was lower than the surrounding ones somehow. I did my best to give them all a tap with a plastic mallet in case one was sticking up, but I ended up doing a fret level, crown and polish to even things out. prior to this the frets felt fine, except for the spot that buzzed due to a low fret. The frets and fingerboard then got a light polish with 0000 steel wool, and then oiled the fingerboard with F-One. 4. The back of the neck had no finish applied, which is fine with me as I don't mind bare wood, but it was just ever so slightly the tiniest bit rough, so I rubbed it down lightly with 0000 steel wool and now it feels pretty nice and smooth 5. The pickups wobble a little front to back (like toward the head and toward the bridge), since there are just the two screws and springs holding them in place. So I put some thin foam underneath and around them just to keep them still. It wasn't causing any problems, but I just wanted them to not move. 6. The tone pot was loose, but the knobs pop off in two pieces if you pull them straight up, so that was easy to tighten with a small wrench and put knobs back on. 7. Tuning stability. This will probably be fine depending on how short you can wind the strings into the bridge. The little tuners have a hole all the way through, so you basically poke a string straight through it, and then wind it on with the little tool. For the wound strings, you can keep them pretty short. For the high strings (non wound), you can fold the end of the string over before poking it in, to give it a little more ability to grip. 8. Tuning knobs and the little wrench tool. This bugged me a little at first, because you can turn the thinner strings with your fingers and not need the little crank tool, but the low A and E strings took a lot of effort.... HOWEVER, if you just take the edge of your pick and put it in the tuner slots, it becomes really easy to tune. Once I figured that out, I liked the bridge a lot better. I usually use a Jazz III or a Petrucci pick, which is fairly stiff, so they make a perfect little tuning wrench. 9. The veneer top has little divits where the figuring in the burl is (where the orange color peeks through on the stained models). It's no problem, just something I hadn't expected (but I've never owned a guitar like this before, or at this price point). Someone handy could probably finish the top with epoxy or poly to fill those in if they wanted to. This would be a good guitar to do those kinds of experiments with and use as a starting point or as a learning experience. And in the end you could definitely have something really nice. So, that's my 12 hour impression ! Once went through each of these little things, and as long as the tuning stability and the strings settle in, I think this will be one of my favorites to practice on. As of today, I was able to get the action pretty low without problems, it sounds decent, everything works, and it's nice and small and light. Nothing else jumps out at me other than that keep glancing over at it, because it's so cool and unique looking (compared to what I'm used to). I will probably never be the guy that spends over $1000 on a guitar unless it's something really unusual. And I doubt I would ever fork over the money for a Strandberg or other premium headless guitar, so this was a perfect quick project for me ! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2023 by Placeholder

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