Ibanez RG350mdx Review

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[[Category:Gear]]
[[Category:Gear]]
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== General Information ==
== General Information ==
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'''Weapon:''' Electric Guitar
'''Weapon:''' Electric Guitar
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'''Make:''' [http://www.ibanez.com/ Ibanez]
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'''Make:''' [http://www.guitarmasterclass.net/wiki/index.php/Ibanez Ibanez]
'''Model:''' Rg350mdx, Rg350dx, Rg3503ex
'''Model:''' Rg350mdx, Rg350dx, Rg3503ex
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'''Price:''' $399-$499 (depends where you buy it)
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'''Playing Style:''' Progressive, Metal, Blues, Some Classical.
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'''Price:''' $399-$499
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'''Price Paid:''' $570 (w/ tax - 2006)
== Sound ==
== Sound ==
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9: Well lets just say this guitar is a VERY versatile piece of machinery, With the standard Infinity S3 and S4's in it, i can get a very Bluesy sound, a great Metal sound for sick ass riffage, an EXCELLENT clean tone, and anything else you can think of this guitar can do it if you spend enough time with it, it definetly doesnt have the best blues tone or classic rock tone by any chance, but, if you just play those kinda style every now and then for fun like me it wont bother you, i think this guitar is aimed generally more towards the Metal and or "Shred" Oriented guitarist. It works well with any amps, ive used it on Marshall's, Hartke's, Crate's, Fender's, and Line 6 Amps and it sounds great on all of them, it even works well with low tunings, the lowest ive gone one it is B Standard, and it still sounds Godly. If you like a guitar that can give you a wide variety of tones, and do an excellent job on all of them, here it is baby smile.gif
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'''Riffage: 7.75'''
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With the stock pickups installed the sound is surprisingly versatile. By no means will this excel in every genre, but it handles Metal/Rock excellently. Fast thrash metal, epic power metal, to classic vintage style rock tones, it carries all these fairly well. I have even tuned down to B standard (with proper equipment adjustment and string changes) and it even did this fairly well, enough to jam around on. If you were to record though, low tunings like this probably wont be as beefy as they should. The cleans are just how I like them, shimmering chords that have that "pop" to them. This may not be what everyone desires but in my applications its worked splendidly, but that also brings up a slight limitation. By using the neck pickup your chords will fatten up on the clean side, but maybe not as satisfactory as some would like.
 +
 
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'''Lead Work: 9.0'''
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This guitar to me, is a lead guitar. Sure, it handles riffs well - but the naturally low action and thin neck lend itself beautifully to lead work. Bends are effortless, as the fretboard feels great under your fingers, very smooth and polished. The aforementioned thin neck allows your hands comfort with large stretches and fast runs, and the 24 frets allow shredders to have full access to all their desires. The floating bridge allows for massive dive bombs, crazy vibratos, and anything else you so wish it to do.
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This guitar also handles more diversely in this medium, it produces bright and warm leads for epic choruses, smooth, round tones for fast fretwork. Dirty, scratchy tones for some good ol' blues, and even a certain "elasticity" that gives it a very classical guitar feel.
== Feel ==
== Feel ==
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10: Great Great Great!!! i love the way this feels, it has a very fast neck and superb fret access, when i bought this guitar i was actually looking for the JEM 7VH, But since my local music store hasnt had one in 2 years, i picked this baby up, and WOW, i was like "man this is $1000 less and it feels just as great!!" , to me it feels and plays like the "Affordable JEM". I also love this guitar so much because it doesnt require those abstract alien like movements ive had to make to sweep on some other guitars, its very comfortable for all techniques, legato, tapping, sweeping, and 8 Finger Tapping as well.
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'''8.0'''
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== Cons ==
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Its the perfect weight for me, not too heavy but not too light. I need a certain amount of weight in the body so I can really dig into some bends and vibrato, as I tend to shake the whole guitar sometimes. If you want a super-lightweight guitar, or a heavier one, this will probably not meet those needs. Rather, its fits nicely in the middle. With a guitar strap, the weight doesn't distribute as well as some other models, rather its almost entirely focused on one shoulder, how I wear it anyway. (High up) So after a couple hours of wearing it standing up it will wear on you.
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As much as i love this weapon there are some drawbacks, since its the EDGE Pro III Bridge, when changing strings, you have to cut the ball end off of the string, and since the string is held by pressure of a screw against a tiny pad, Rarely, and i do mean rarely, when tuning up, the string might slip out, no harm no foul really, never happened to me while i was playing, and its simple to fix, just slide it back in and make it a bit tighter.
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The second con is tunings, now this is pretty much universal with floating bridges, you cant easily go from E Standard to C Standard, the bridge is held up by a balance of the bridge springs in the back and the string tensions, and if you suddenly just Drop it down to C, Or even D, The bridge will fall into the guitar, then you have to lossen the bridge springs, and adjust the strings to you find a balance between the two for whatever tuning you keep it in, this adds further problem if you change string gauges, if you still want to keep it in E, But go from .09 to .10, then the bridge will probably be leaning toward the front of the guitar, the thicker the string the more tension it requires to keep it in tune. But then again, once you have it in tune, it wont go anywhere, even when you abuse the trem bar smile.gif
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== Equipment ==
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== Overall Impression ==
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The locking nut works beautifully, keeping the guitar ever in tune. The EDGE PRO III bridge takes a lot of flak for being less reliable, however, this is not the case if you take proper care of it. I had to change the basic nuts and bolts on it two years after I bought it cause they were stripped (that though, is my fault), other than that, as long as you play it at least once every day or every other day for awhile it will stay in tune. If you leave it sit without playing for too long, the guitar will drop a half-step or so down.
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A Superb and affordable weapon that will give you what you need and never fail, from Metal Riffage to a down to earth clean and bluesy tone, this baby will give it to you, plus it looks beautiful.
+
The bolt-on neck is a bit of a problem, it does hamper any really thick sustain you might get out of it. However, Change out the stock pickups and this becomes much less of a problem. Sure, its a bolt-on so its going to have this problem to some extent, but a nice pair of custom pickups of your choosing and it shouldn't bother you to any real extent.
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== Alternate Weapon ==
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== Overall Impression ==
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Actually I have yet to find a guitar in this price range that is even close to this, this guitar for me was an alternative to the JEM, And although ive probably only had about 5 hours behind a JEM, I find this guitar to suit me just as well, but if you can afford the JEM , Get it! smile.gif i suppose an alternative if you cant afford this one would be and ESP MH-100, They are decent from what i understand and are only around $300.
+
A superbly built machine with understandable flaws, this is an excellent lead guitar, especially for recording I find. Changing out some stock equipment will greatly improve the sound, but its stock setup is pretty well versed in enough ways to make it highly enjoyable and easy to play. I paid $570 with tax when this came out, now I believe it is only $400, so it is pretty affordable as well.

Current revision


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Contents

General Information

Original Author: The Uncreator

Weapon: Electric Guitar

Make: Ibanez

Model: Rg350mdx, Rg350dx, Rg3503ex

Playing Style: Progressive, Metal, Blues, Some Classical.

Price: $399-$499

Price Paid: $570 (w/ tax - 2006)

Sound

Riffage: 7.75 With the stock pickups installed the sound is surprisingly versatile. By no means will this excel in every genre, but it handles Metal/Rock excellently. Fast thrash metal, epic power metal, to classic vintage style rock tones, it carries all these fairly well. I have even tuned down to B standard (with proper equipment adjustment and string changes) and it even did this fairly well, enough to jam around on. If you were to record though, low tunings like this probably wont be as beefy as they should. The cleans are just how I like them, shimmering chords that have that "pop" to them. This may not be what everyone desires but in my applications its worked splendidly, but that also brings up a slight limitation. By using the neck pickup your chords will fatten up on the clean side, but maybe not as satisfactory as some would like.

Lead Work: 9.0 This guitar to me, is a lead guitar. Sure, it handles riffs well - but the naturally low action and thin neck lend itself beautifully to lead work. Bends are effortless, as the fretboard feels great under your fingers, very smooth and polished. The aforementioned thin neck allows your hands comfort with large stretches and fast runs, and the 24 frets allow shredders to have full access to all their desires. The floating bridge allows for massive dive bombs, crazy vibratos, and anything else you so wish it to do.

This guitar also handles more diversely in this medium, it produces bright and warm leads for epic choruses, smooth, round tones for fast fretwork. Dirty, scratchy tones for some good ol' blues, and even a certain "elasticity" that gives it a very classical guitar feel.

Feel

8.0

Its the perfect weight for me, not too heavy but not too light. I need a certain amount of weight in the body so I can really dig into some bends and vibrato, as I tend to shake the whole guitar sometimes. If you want a super-lightweight guitar, or a heavier one, this will probably not meet those needs. Rather, its fits nicely in the middle. With a guitar strap, the weight doesn't distribute as well as some other models, rather its almost entirely focused on one shoulder, how I wear it anyway. (High up) So after a couple hours of wearing it standing up it will wear on you.

Equipment

The locking nut works beautifully, keeping the guitar ever in tune. The EDGE PRO III bridge takes a lot of flak for being less reliable, however, this is not the case if you take proper care of it. I had to change the basic nuts and bolts on it two years after I bought it cause they were stripped (that though, is my fault), other than that, as long as you play it at least once every day or every other day for awhile it will stay in tune. If you leave it sit without playing for too long, the guitar will drop a half-step or so down.

The bolt-on neck is a bit of a problem, it does hamper any really thick sustain you might get out of it. However, Change out the stock pickups and this becomes much less of a problem. Sure, its a bolt-on so its going to have this problem to some extent, but a nice pair of custom pickups of your choosing and it shouldn't bother you to any real extent.

Overall Impression

A superbly built machine with understandable flaws, this is an excellent lead guitar, especially for recording I find. Changing out some stock equipment will greatly improve the sound, but its stock setup is pretty well versed in enough ways to make it highly enjoyable and easy to play. I paid $570 with tax when this came out, now I believe it is only $400, so it is pretty affordable as well.