The Parker Fly has some special features that set it apart. I got a chance to try one out a couple of years ago:
The body is
very thin. The one I tried couldn't have been much thicker than about 4cm/about 1 and a half inches at the the thickest part.
It's fingerboard is made of a composite material rather than wood.
The neck itself looked like mahogany. It's shape and size is like the neck of the les paul.
It has stainless steel frets instead of the usual nickel/silver alloy. The frets are not huge like jackson, but more medium size I would say. The shape of the frets is more 'round' than usual. They feel very smooth with bends maybe because of the harder steel. The frets were installed and shaped really well.
The frets do not extend into slots in the fretboard -they are held on by a strong glue -or maybe they are molded or built into the fiberglass or whatever that fretboard is made of- it was hard to to tell just by looking.
The tremolo/vibrato bridge is unique to this guitar. It is full floating with the ability to be locked completely, limited to push down only or full floating mode. It's made of aluminum and seemed to be of high quality. The shape of the bar felt strange to me since I'm used to a floyd rose, but that was just me.
The one I played had a piezo pickup with active electronics built into the guitar for that pickup. The output jack is stereo so you can send the normal and piezo sounds to separate amps if you want. I was told that it will also work on a regular non-stereo guitar cable but I didn't actually see that done when I tried the guitar.
I also believe that the pickups in this guitar are of a special size. I think they would have to be to fit in the extra thin body.
The layout of the electronics is also unique to this guitar. I didn't try out all of the features mainly because I didn't know what all the controls did.
The scale length is 25.5 inches (like strat).
The guitar was surprisingly loud unplugged and the action was very low. The neck felt great although it was very different from what I'm used to. The thin body made the guitar very light and comfortable. It had a modern sound to it, I'm not really sure it there's really a direct comparison with another guitar I can think of. It sounds more like a strat than a les paul to me, with pronounced highs and attack -but it still sort of has it's own tone. I liked the guitar a lot, but there are so many special things about it I think it would take me a while to get used to it. I think it's great and versatile guitar and it surprises me that more people don't use them. Overall, very high quality. The shape is cooler in person than in pictures and I have no idea why, maybe if you ever look at one for yourself you'll know what I mean. There's many small curves that you can't see in the pictures and back side of the guitar is curved nicely also.
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