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Author Topic: PRS SE Custom 24 Review  (Read 10626 times)

Slartibartfarst42

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PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« on: December 04, 2011, 03:45:45 PM »
I've had this guitar since the beginning of August now and I've held off writing a full review so that I have time to get better acquainted with it. Anyway, here goes:

Body

This is your typical PRS double cut body so no real surprises. The body is mahogany with a maple cap and quilted maple veneer. Mine is Vintage Yellow with a red back and I'd have to say, it looks gorgeous. It's certainly a more beautiful guitar to just look at than my Jackson and always gets very appreciative comments. The finish is really excellent and I don't mean just for the price. The finish on this guitar stands up to any guitar I've ever played and is simply beautiful. It is surprisingly light for a mahogany guitar and the lower horn is sculptured so that upper fret access is easy and comfortable. As this is the SE version, it's a completely flat top so I don't find it quite as comfortable to play as my Jackson but that really is the only negative.

Neck

This is a very comfortable guitar to play. The neck doesn't feel as small as my Jackson so I tend to use the Jackson when I'm playing faster (or at least as fast as I get) and the PRS for everything else. Having said that, this is NOT a chunky neck and I find it considerably easier to play than any Gibson and I find it to be at least as good as a modern Fender neck. It's hard to describe because the PRS neck feels different to any other guitar neck I've tried but it is comfortable to play and easy to adapt to even when playing some complex lead. The neck is beautifully set into the body and the cutaways are so far up the neck that it's almost as easy playing this guitar at the dusty end of the fretboard as it is on my neck-thru Jackson. In that respect it really is a fantastic guitar and I love it. The rosewood fretboard is of excellent quality and the bird inlays are fantastic. I like the neck on this guitar so much that I came within a whisker of just selling my beloved Jackson and just using this. The action is low thanks to a good radius and excellent craftsmanship.

Controls

One tone and one volume control are well positioned and work very well. I'm not as happy with the positioning of the pickup selector as it's a small toggle design and is positioned so that my hand has to reach over the tremelo so quick pickup changes are far more difficult than on my Jackson. I would rather they'd positioned it similar to my Jackson or on the upper horn like a Les Paul. The tremelo system is a vintage style but I find it far superior to the ones used on Stratocasters. Quality is excellent and the action is smooth, fluid and controlled. For subtle stuff it's also better than the OFR on my Jackson which, in comparison, is like a sledgehammer. I suppose the OFR does what it does very well but if you need more subtlety, you'll find the PRS system better.

Sound
This surprised me a bit. It's thick and organic like a Les Paul despite not having the weight so I love the tone this thing has. The pick ups are HFS and VB and they're a lot more versatile than I expected. The pickups don't have the ultimate articulation that my Bareknuckles have but they make up for it in other ways. The HFS is ceramic yet it has all the organic warmth I usually would have associated with Alnico magnets. I also find it to be a hotter pickup than my Holydiver and surprisingly, it's much better at cleans. If I ever play a song that needs a warm, clean tone, the Jackson is immediately ditched for the PRS. It's just so much fuller and warmer than I can manage from the Holydiver and will play anything from clean, through Blues to Heavy Metal without a problem. I absolutely love Bareknuckle pickups and I keep being tempted by a set of Emeralds for this guitar but these are so good, I'm worried I'll lose what the guitar already has. I have NEVER owned a guitar before where I haven't had a powerful urge to put Bareknuckles in it and I think that says a lot about how good the guitar is from stock. The neck pickup is also wonderful, with creamy lead tones and warm rhythms.

Overall

You can buy the same model as mine (25th Anniversary model) from GAK at the moment for only £450 and quite honestly, that's a complete steal because in terms of quality, I'd say it's worth close to twice that. It's certainly no worse than my Soloist and that cost me about £800 in a cash sale on a model that was on runout and I still felt the need to put Bareknuckles in on top of that! If you want a double cut guitar that is beautifully made, easy to play, has incredible tone and will cover almost any style, I can't see you finding a better guitar than a PRS SE Custom 24. It's the best money I've ever spent on a guitar that's for sure.
BKP owned:

Bridge - Emerald; Cold Sweat; Crawler; A-Bomb; Holydiver; Miracle Man; Sinner; Trilogy Suite

Neck - Emerald; Cold Sweat; Crawler; Holydiver; Sinner; Trilogy Suite

witeter

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #1 on: December 04, 2011, 03:53:30 PM »
I have an older model  but still a PRS SE Custom 24 in grey-black, i think its a fantastic guitar and the pickups it came with were great for stock imo-didnt stop me upgrading to a C-bomb set though :-)
Highly recommended guitar at a ridiculous price

Philly Q

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #2 on: December 04, 2011, 04:58:19 PM »
I like your long reviews!   :)

I think the SE series are very decent guitars.  

I have an SE EG (HSS version) which I bought from Sound Control (RIP) - they had several in stock and I was able to choose one with a really nice rosewood board.

Pickups aren't the best, but they're easily replaceable, and I have my doubts about the origins of their "mahogany" - although there's nothing wrong with the way it sounds.  Even the bridge seems like a good copy of the real PRS tremolo and works very well (I added a Fender plastic tip to the bar, it just feels better that way).

I think the only real weaknesses are the tuners, which are cr@p, and the nut, which is made from some nasty black plastic.

Mine has been sitting in its gig bag for ages without pickups - one of my many abandoned projects.  I must get it sorted out and maybe get Feline to fit a new nut.  I think it's a guitar worth keeping.
« Last Edit: December 05, 2011, 03:10:04 PM by Philly Q »
BKPs I've Got:  RR, BKP-91, ITs, VHII, CS set, Emeralds
BKPs I Had:  RY+Abraxas, Crawlers, BD+SM

Mr. Air

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #3 on: December 04, 2011, 07:35:24 PM »
Great review. It instantly had me searching the local danish "ebay-like" site for one, but unfortunaltely (or maybe fortunately) there was none only lots of SE Tremontis and a PRS CE 24 going for aprox 1000£ (ain't that cheap?)

It seems like you got your paws on an excelent guitar and I hope you'll enjoy it for many years to come  :D
Mississippi Queens, Stormy Monday/Apaches, Emeralds, Nailbomb (bridge)

Telerocker

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #4 on: December 04, 2011, 08:07:28 PM »
Great review! When I can grab a P90-equipped SE Hollow I won't hesitate.
Mules, VHII, Crawler, MM's, IT's, BG50's.

Slartibartfarst42

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #5 on: December 04, 2011, 08:53:34 PM »
Glad you liked the review  :D

This was actually a fairly short review by my standards as I didn't have long to complete it but I always try to give as much information as possible because I know that detailed reviews are what I always look for when I'm considering a purchase.

The degree to which I love my guitars was brought home to me the other day when I was sorting out the renewal of my house insurance so I was trying to work out what I would replace my Jackson and PRS with if I had to. After searching through a few websites I had to conclude that I'd pretty much get the same again. They don't do an SL3 anymore so I guess I'd be tempted to spend the extra and get the SLAT 3-6 and then ditch the EMG pickups for Bareknuckle and in many ways that would suit me very well as I naturally prefer H-H to H-S-S. However, I still think that guitar is a bit overpriced for what it is. For my other guitar I'd simply get another PRS SE Custom 24, exactly the same as the one I have. I've given a lot of thought as to why the PRS appeals so much to me when it should be a clear second to the Jackson yet it isn't and I think there are a few reasons:

1) I prefer the thicker and more organic sound of the PRS.

2) I prefer the H-H layout of the PRS

3) I like the versatility of the PRS. The Jackson is distinctly a Rock/Metal guitar but the PRS will do just anything and do it bloody well. I hate to say it, but a lot of this is down to the pickups. The Holydiver and Trilogy Suites are fantastic for what I use them for but they simply don't have the versatility of the PRS and while they have far better articulation than the stock PRS pickups, they don't have the same warmth, versatility and soul.

That last point kinda sums up the guitars in a way. I love the Jackson to bits and I do find it a touch more comfortable and easier to play (maybe because I'm more used to it) but it simply doesn't have the soul of the PRS. The PRS seems alive in a way the Jackson doesn't, even though I think the Jackson does it's job very well. There's a certain 'something' about the PRS that is difficult to put into words. Put it this way; if both guitars were lost/stolen/ damaged at the same time, I'd be seriously tempted to take the money for both guitars and just buy a USA PRS Custom 24 and a Whammy pedal as with that setup, I doubt I'd ever need another guitar. Do I sense an insurance claim coming on?  :twisted:
BKP owned:

Bridge - Emerald; Cold Sweat; Crawler; A-Bomb; Holydiver; Miracle Man; Sinner; Trilogy Suite

Neck - Emerald; Cold Sweat; Crawler; Holydiver; Sinner; Trilogy Suite

dvorak

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #6 on: December 05, 2011, 03:05:10 PM »
I'll agree with the versatility of the SE Custom 24. I love mine with all the characters that you have mentioned. I also have a Jackson, but a Kelly KE3 (alder body) which is seeing less and less action mainly because of it's stupid shape and useless cutout which makes it impossible to reach the 24th fret (but that is another story :))

My SE is currently at my tech getting an Alnico nailbomb and a cold sweat neck. I'll let you know how it plays after that. It's also getting coil tap and phase reverse coils with two push-pull pots for even more versatility

The Custom 24 SE is a wonderful guitar, much better than expected. What I love most about it in terms of playability is the incredibly smooth frets.

Like Philly posted, change the nut and tuners and you go from a nice guitars with flaws to a very nice guitar.
---
PRS Custom 24 - 59/09
PRS Custom 24 SE - Alnico NB/Coldsweat
Vintage V100 Lemon drop - HD

ericsabbath

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Re: PRS SE Custom 24 Review
« Reply #7 on: December 09, 2011, 02:00:46 AM »
had the korean Custom 22 version (that I bought from Adam.M, right here on this forum, 3 years ago)
really nice guitar, although it's nowhere near a real PRS (had two mccarties and a CE-22 later)

pickups were too compressed for my taste, but good and quite tight sounding
I remember the bridge pickup sounded a lot hotter than the miracle man I had in some other guitar

neck is a bit wide for me, but plays quite nicely and didn't require any setup at all after FIVE BLOODY MONTHS ON A GODDAMN SHIP

what really pissed me off was the fake top
it surely looked real, but after a minucious inspection, I noticed that the body pieces collage line could be seeing from the top
that means there's not even a maple veneer, just printed paper glued over the "back" wood
sadly, most big brands today are doing this... just check most schecter or ESP LTD models... full 1 piece quilted "maple" tops in most recent models
this was harder to spot on the PRS SE cause they fake the bookmatched effect and also the body binding that was supposed to be part of the maple top on a real PRS

still was one of the best non-US made guitars I had, and the best non-Les Paul
« Last Edit: December 09, 2011, 02:03:37 AM by Eric Hellstyle »
Riff Raff, Mules, Black Dog, VHII's, Cold Sweat