Welcome to one of the most active flamenco sites on the Internet. Guests can read most posts but if you want to participate click here to register.
This site is dedicated to the memory of Paco de Lucía, Ron Mitchell, Guy Williams, Linda Elvira, Philip John Lee, Craig Eros, Ben Woods, David Serva and Tom Blackshear who went ahead of us.
We receive 12,200 visitors a month from 200 countries and 1.7 million page impressions a year. To advertise on this site please contact us.
I bought the Cordoba F7 at Sam Ash in Westminster CA store. Salesman Jerry demoed the F7 and Yamaha CG 172. I chose the F7 and took it home to let strings settle. I took it out of the nice gig bag and found that a bass string had broken. I had paid the $40 extended service fee and took the F7 in to Sam Ash store for nut and saddle height adjustment as well as a new set of La Bella 820 red nylon strings.
The string height was about 6 mm at 12th fret. Anxious to see how it plays with adjustments and my favorite La Bella strings. Meanwhile I'm rusty and practicing with my old Martin 0018G, which sounds pretty nice with new Labella 820's . Jerry the salesman said that the Martin is probably worth from $700 to $1000 with current market. May take it to McCabes and have them check whether straightening with weights, etc. is worth it.
Your probably right, the Yamaha also needed string height adjustment. I have read that this is common on a lot of entry level guitars. BTW, the F7 is a nice looking guitar, hope it will be adequate for my humble use. It probably wouldn't work well in an archery application with Savarez strings.
The F-7 has an adjustable truss rod. If it is, in fact 6mm at the 12th fret, there is a possibility of a forward bow in the neck. If so, straightening the neck along with a lowering of the saddle could possibly make it playable.
even at 5mm that is way too high and you might want to take the guitar in before trying to reduce the height as lowering the saddle might be a reason for mr. ash to fight you over a refund. as nick said, it might be the adjustable neck. a new guitar should not require major surgery to make it playable. something is clearly not right.
6mm is more than even the toughest classical guitar would ever have...
_____________________________
Music is a big continent with different lascapes and corners. Some of them I do visit frequently, some from time to time and some I know from hearsay only ...
A good musical instrument is one that inspires one to express as free as possible
Friend, 'Truss rods are not for setting neck angle, they are for adjusting and fine tuning neck relief.
If you have 6mm at the 12th fret you really should heed the advice of the previous posters and return the guitar. Eventually you will come to understand why 6mm is WAY- WAY-WAY too high for 12th fret action. If you wait too long to return it you may not be able to return it.
If you live in the LA area call Guitar Salon International and ask them how a Cordoba should be adjusted when you buy it. They distribute the Cordoba line and they can give you guidance on how it should be set up then you buy it.
All is well with my Cordoba F7 flamenco guitar. Travis at Sam Ash, Westminster CA was thrilled by the playability and sound after he lowered the action and installed a set of La Bella #820 strings. It plays and sounds as a good flamenco guitar should and would probably impress a competent flamenco guitarist. I intend to learn proper right and left hand technique after decades of messing around with flamenco and folk music. This forum is a good source of information and would have helped me a lot years ago. I have been an active scale RC model plane builder and flier for many years and contributor on RC Groups forums, going by the handle "E-Challenged". It is also a great source of information and you are welcome to look in there if you have any interest in the many types of RC model planes.
I bought this guitar in 2013 and although my Francisco Bros Solea Especial 2020 is a much better guitar, sometimes I still do some recording with my Mundo Flamenco 3F/Cordoba F7 as it is a very resistent guitar. Please find below some details: Concerning this flamenco guitar, it's a cheap China model with a solid spruce top. The sound is not equilibrate at all as the basses are very strong and the trebles a bit weak, but it's a very resistant guitar that can be used at parties, outdoors, around a campfire and even for 1-2 hours in 35% humidity environment, if you put it back in its light case afterwards. The Mundo Flamenco 3F is not available at Mundo Flamenco anymore, but you can find it at Thomann as Cordoba F7 model. It's exactly the same guitar as you will see in the following links: https://www.mundo-flamenco.com/nc/en/... https://www.thomann.de/de/cordoba_f7_...
Why are factory-made guitars discussed so much on the Lutherie forum? Do luthiers really care about them?
People enjoy hearing from experienced Luthiers EXACTLY how junky they are! One of my favorites was about the hot glue gun used on the Hermanos Sanchis Lopez story. That was great!
People enjoy hearing from experienced Luthiers EXACTLY how junky they are!
It always amazes me when people come to look at my guitars and expect me to know about some (or every) company's Model 1-FQ-XYZ-LMNOP. I tell them that I am not familiar with those; I make hand-made guitars.