Heres another way to look at it quality wise. Japan is not a third world country, they are on par with the US and Brittain Germany etc. in their economy and technology. I would even bet you that there is Japanese manufacturing technology at work in most of the US guitar manufacturing facilities, not to mention US manufacturing facilities in general. So, when you ask about quality in US vs. import Jackson(in Japan at least) I would say that there is no real difference in quality at all between US made and Japanese made Jackson guitars. The only percievable difference is the status mark that you own a USA made Jackson. I own both a USA Soloist and 2 Japanese made Jacksons and all 3 are all very well made and between the 3 I cant find any variance in quality and craftsmanship. Now Indonesian and Chinese and all the other 2nd and 3rd world manufacturing, yeah, youll find quite a bit of them vary quite greatly from the USA made and Jap made and even amongst themselves from the same facility(look at the JS series for example).
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Question: Are the USAs worth the extra $ over Imports?
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I will say this, the MIJ jackson charvels made during the early 90's a damn close to teh USA models in quality. I play USA's but I also have a few of those MIJs from the early 90s, and dammit, those are GREAT guitars. I feel they are every bit as good as a USA model. they only had about a 4 year window those guitars were produced. they had schaller trems, great workmanship, just damn great guitars. good pickups too by jackson. The only thing I think they could have did better is put Duncans in them, of course thats just personal opinion."clean sounds are for pussies" - Axewielder
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It's not that Japan can't build guitars that are every bit as good as American-made. In fact, they build some outstanding instruments. It's just that Jackson has chosen to offer imports to fill a certain price point in the market. If there were only USA's like it was back in the 80's, they wouldn't be able to compete with the other companies who use the cheaper labor overseas.
For example, back in the 80's when all Jacksons and Charvels were American made, Kramer was also offering the Focus and Striker series which were Japanese, in addition to their American made New Jersey line. I bought a brand new Kramer Focus 1000 for $480.00 in Austin, TX. This guitar was made by ESP and it plays just as well today as it did back then. It even came with an OFR while lots of companies were selling cheap pot metal/pig iron licensed copies. Not to name names, but IBANEZ comes to mind (don't even get me started).
Conversely, that same store where I bought this Kramer (Lightning Music in Austin) also sold Jacksons. Were they nicer than my import Kramer? Absolutely, but there's no way Jackson could have met that $300-$500 price point with their attention to detail, features, and American labor.
So that's the bottom line. Every company wants to compete at each of the popular pricing points and the only way they can do that is to offer imports that are made with cheaper labor and have "lesser" features. That labor might be every bit as skilled, however.Last edited by PowerTube; 03-08-2010, 01:21 PM.Member - National Sarcasm Society
"Oh, sure. Like we need your support."
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I chose USA because of feel and sound. It just felt better and sounded better than the import. The import quality seemed good but in my experience the USA was just better. Cost more yes, worth it YES!2011 USA Jackson Soloist
2007 USA Jackson Soloist
2007 USA BC Rich Warlock
2009 Edwards ECY 165
2009 Schecter Hellraiser
2006 USA BC Rich Wave
2012 Gibson LP Trad
1981 USA BC Rich Mockingbird
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Originally posted by Nightbat View PostSomehow I doubt that
MIJ neckthru's already aren't that much cheaper than USA's
this is due to the sum of all parts:
materials/craftsmanship/labour
if anything MI3rdworld manufacturers usualy skimps on Everything
Yes I think they would be cheaper than MIJ, but not by much (MIC Rasmus/Suhr for $1k anyone?)
Also, Japan is hardly a third world country... Not even close. It is one of the most developed countries on earth. Just look at their automotive production, for instance. To compare Japan to Indonesia and China is not even close to reality.
With all that said, I do not disagree the USA's are better guitars. I do imagine most of it may be fit/finish and setup, however.Last edited by potatohead; 03-08-2010, 03:03 PM.
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A bit of Jackson import history for you....http://audiozone.dk/index-filer/jack...al-history.htm
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A USA Jackson is worth the 2x extra cash over the Pro line if:
-You want a guitar with a legacy.
-you feel nostalgic, and want to satisfy your dream to have a guitar that were played by the guitar hero's of the day.
-If you strongly prefer the neck and sound of the USA(which in my opinion of owning 2 pro series and 1 select, The Select is just downright AMAZING)
-If you want to Retain Resale value for the most part.
-Bragging rights
-For the "made in USA" decal on the headstock
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Well, just to let you know how it turned out, I ended up buying an Epi Zakk Wylde Bullseye Custom with ZW active EMGs for $555. So I did not buy the DKMG, I did pay $125 more for the ZW but it is probably a far better guitar. It certainly looks a lot hotter. LOL
Last edited by RockinJim; 03-09-2010, 09:27 AM.2011 Charvel Aqua Wildcard #4
2011 GMW tele project
2010 GMW strat project
2010 Fender USA strat Highway 1
2006 Peavey HP Special black
2005 Peavey HP Special NAMM Guitar teal quilt
2004 Gibson LP Classic goldtop
1990s ESP MII Deluxe purple
1988 Kramer Nighswan baby blue polka dot
Bugera 333Xl
Marshall 2X12 1936 cab
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Thanks, I don't have a Les Paul in my collection and at that price with the active EMGs, couldn't pass on it.2011 Charvel Aqua Wildcard #4
2011 GMW tele project
2010 GMW strat project
2010 Fender USA strat Highway 1
2006 Peavey HP Special black
2005 Peavey HP Special NAMM Guitar teal quilt
2004 Gibson LP Classic goldtop
1990s ESP MII Deluxe purple
1988 Kramer Nighswan baby blue polka dot
Bugera 333Xl
Marshall 2X12 1936 cab
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