![]() ![]() As on most neckthru guitars, upper fret access is excellent. ![]() Personally, I'm not a huge fan of these pickups (easy replacement) and TOM bridges, but otherwise, this is a simple, comfortable superstrat. 3+3 Jackson Soloist headstock, non-locking Jackson branded tuners volume and tone controls, barrel style input jack H-H pickup config, EMG-HZ or EMG pickups (more on that later) TOM style bridge (Jackson JT390 TonePros T3BT-B is told to be a direct replacement) Ebony fretboard, jumbo frets, 16-20" compound radius That's an average weight for a guitar, I wouldn't call it particularly light. It is not literally lightweight, though: mine weights 3,9 kg, which is light compared to a not chambered Les Paul, but heavy compared to a Jackson DKMGT (MG series bolt-on superstrat with Alder body). This model is called lightweight because of the back of the body being curved out a bit to save weight, so this is not a full-thickness Soloist. ![]() SLS stands for Super Lightweight Soloist, where Soloist means the usual neck-thru construction and a Superstrat body. IIRC the SLSMG retailed for around $1000 in the US. The factory offered cheaper lines like the X- and JS-series, usually made in India, so the MG series were mid-priced instruments in the Jackson lineup. MG series were the budget Japanese line for Jackson in the early '00s. This is my first review, English is not my first language, so bare with me. I've had this guitar for a couple of months now (you can find my NGD thread here), so I decided to write a review. ![]()
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