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Leo Jaymz DIY TL Style Electric Guitar Kits Roasted Maple Neck and Maple Fingerboard - Mahogany Body and Frameless Pickups - 2 point tremolo bridge - Pluggable wires

  • Based on 818 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Tuesday, Nov 26
Order within 2 hours and 46 minutes
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Style: TL-M


Features

  • Bolt-on Neck TL style electric guitar DIY Kits,Solid mahogany body and Roasted maple neck.
  • Beautiful mahogany body has been deeply polished and sprayed with the bottom varnish, which reduces the work of the buyer for body painting.
  • 2 point tremolo bridge, H-H frameless pickup.
  • All cavity drilled for pickups and control knbobs.
  • Maple fingerboard with 6mm pearl dot inlay.
  • 1 side Machine heads for a shaped headstock.
  • All the wire cable and screws are included in it.
  • 25.5" Scale and Maple neck in 21 frets.
  • The thickened single side can be pasted with copper foil paper, and the noise can be effectively reduced by sticking it to the positions such as the wires compartment and the pickup groove.
  • All wires are plug-in design, eliminating the trouble of welding.

Description

Leo Jaymz DIY Guitar KIt


Item Weight: 9.73 pounds


Package Dimensions: 29 x 20 x 3 inches


Country of Origin: China


Date First Available: November 4, 2022


Back Material: Mahogany


Body Material: Mahogany


Fretboard Material: Maple Wood


Guitar Pickup Configuration: H


Scale Length: 25.5 Inches


String Material: Metal


Top Material: Maple Wood, Rosewood, Mahogany Wood


Neck Material Type: Maple


Number of Strings: 6


Guitar Bridge System: 2 point tremolo bridge


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Tuesday, Nov 26

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • With a little tweaking you get a great guitar...
Style: Headless Flame Maple
Despite a few hiccups and workarounds I love this guitar. So much so that I have ordered a second kit in plain mahogany. It looks like my complaints about the output jack and three way switch have been addressed in the new revisions of the kit. My kit came with a straight maple neck that has a 50s baseball bat feel which I like. It looks like the new versions include a five piece neck with a more modern profile and extra meat at the first fret to give the feel of traditional guitar with headstock. I’m excited to have a second comfortable guitar with what looks to be a more modern feel. I finished the guitar using water based products, Aquacoat grain filler, General Finishes sanding sealer, General Finishes satin tinted with TransTint dye, Createx Wicked colors for the black back and black parts of the burst, and General Finishes High Performance satin for the topcoat. This is the first satin finish I have tried and I love the look. It also means no finish sanding and polishing which is a big time saver. Pro: The resulting guitar is one of my favorite instruments to play. Once you get used to the bridge, string changes are easy and tuning stability is great. It’s the most comfortable guitar to hold in any position. Because of the zero fret the action can be set ridiculously low. I swapped out the electronics and pickups and it sounds amazing. Despite its lack of mass it does not sound small or lack sustain. Con: The bridge is hard to intonate and set string height accurately. The height adjustment also affects the length of the string so there is a lot of back and forth which ends in “close enough” for both height and intonation. The screws that hold the saddles in place are hard to get at when setting intonation. The output jack is too long for the space allotted so it runs into the side of the control cavity. It also barely fits in the pre-drilled hole and requires too much force to screw into the wood. The neck pocket seems too shallow for the bridge height so the neck needed to be shimmed to get playable string height at the top of the fretboard. Stupid stuff: It came with black hardware with the exception of the chrome three way which looks off. Also the control plate that came with mine had screw holes that are beveled on the wrong side which leaves the screw heads proud of the control cavity plate. I wish they would have recessed the body to accommodate the flat base of the strap buttons. I didn’t notice this until I had completed the finish or I would have done this myself. Something about the headstock hardware can allow the strings to shift across the zero fret when bending below the third fret. It doesn’t happen often, it's just a little off putting and not a deal breaker. Normal stuff: The neck required a fret level and dress to play it’s best, that said high frets were few and it did not require very much material removal to get dead level frets. I just received the second kit and will either review it separately. I’m hoping the revisions make it an even better instrument. This will be the third Leo Jaymz kit I’ve put together. I think they are a great value. Both this kit and the Explorer kit I have already completed were not perfect and required some problem solving to complete but I think this is true of most kits on the market. If you are looking for a way into guitar building these kits are a great place to start. I didn’t use the electronics in either kit because I wanted specific sounds for both instruments. That said I’m sure the included pickups and harness will provide decent usable results. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2023 by Bill D. Bill D.

  • Alexi Laiho Kit! Great kit, great price, great place to start
Style: AL
This is for the AL version! First kit I've ever put together! It was mostly great! Pics of relevant pros and cons. Pros: Went together very quickly. Wood grain is not awful. All holes lined up. Can set the neck or bolt it. Kit came in very protective package. kit has wire connectors, no soldering Cons: 1. Tuners rattled every time a string was played. 2. The ground cable on the spring tensioner broke while installing - just pinned it under the spring - works fine! 3. the nut that came with kit is kinda weak, I stripped one of the bolts the first time tightening it. 4. the nut was to high on fret side and action was so high that fretting the first 3 frets would not play correct pitch. 5. the nut didn't have enough of a break angle to keep the string on the nut in the first place. so when i tightened the locking bolts, it de-tuned the guitar. 6. Floyd Rose bridge was a pain in the pants to setup. this was the first point in the build where i needed instructions. naturally I followed the link provided in the box. the video "instructions" are a very short, shoddy video, kinda putting it together and then doing the hard bits off screen... one second it didn't have the bridge, and boom like magic the Floyd rose was just installed. so for anyone trying to install a Floyd rose for the first time, youtube this "guns and guitars Floyd rose Strat" watch the video and you'll probably be good. Here is what i needed to replace and buy to get this guitar to stay in tune, and to chug. 1 Tuners - I got nice auto trimming locking tuners, but any decent set will do. 2. genuine Floyd rose locking nut, german made, seems better than one sent. 2.a. had to sand down under the nut quite a bit before I could get a low enough action. 3. string retainer bar - to increase break angle, so strings would rest on the nut fully 4. needed to get more springs, the 3 sent with package are good enough for light gage strings, but not for heavier gages, so i got a 3 pack of the black Floyd rose genuine springs and found the perfect balance. TLDR: Great Kit, could use a few modifications, but even with everything i replaced, it was still under 300 including the kit. The pickup is fine, its not great, but its not as bad as i thought, considering a decent emg or seymore are the same price as the whole kit. The single pot is fine, it needs to be cleaned and lubed, has a little noise bleed through when turning the knob. putting the back cover on upside down gives me access to the spring screws, so i can adjust without taking it off. also fist time I've tried to do a paint job, its something... it can chug. RIP Alexi Laiho ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2023 by Aaron K. Aaron K.

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