I just bought one and as with many new guitars that you buy, you need to have it fine tuned by either you or a luthier. One thing that was needing adjustment (filing/grinding ) was the ridiculously high bridge nut. It is what it is it's a $250 guitar. Sounds pretty good and has a good feel about it.
I just picked one of these up to take on a 3 week vacation in July. Sadly, I'm probably going to return it because the action is impossibly high. Over 4mm at the 12th fret, which is significantly more than either of my acoustics with the same string gauge. I can probably lower it a bit with a new saddle, but I think I'm just going to return it and spend a little more and TG Ultralight. It's a shame too, because I love the design of the Donner. It's just a bit of a chore to play.
I can't speak to yours specifically, but any new guitar should get a setup. Try checking the neck relief first before going after the saddle. 4mm is really high, but that screams neck bow to me.
@@TomislavIvanFlis I ended up buying an Affinity Stratocaster, threw some new strings, tusk nut, tuning trees and thornbucker on to replace my stock humbuckers. It’s been a lot of fun getting the hang of new songs
OMG! I was wondering why the guitar strap had those clips on it!!!!!!! Hahaha. My complicated analysis of this strap made me crazy! Thanks for explaining that it was also the bag strap!!!!!?? 😂
Awesome review! Just got mine a few days ago and I can confirm that this thing has had some serious thought put into it. Most importantly, I totally agree that it does exactly what it advertises. If you need something light, portable, and quiet this is 100% the guitar. However, I do wish it could be a bit quieter. I'm a student, and want to be able to practice in a dorm type setting without worrying about bothering a roommate. I've found that if you just turn up the volume quite a bit its a decent way to practice strumming quite softly, but you can also put some cloth between some of the strings to really mute the sound.
Ive just acquired one of these guitars and the high action made it unplayable. It’s a common issue with this instrument. It’s built for acoustic strings (10’s) so that is about as light as you can go given the bridge is designed to take a wound 3rd. It’s with my guitar luthier now who is trying to make it playable. He didn’t seem that hopeful. I’ll demo it when I get it back. Fennah Rob 👍🏻
Have you tried doing a setup? Mine was one of the first in Canada and took a very slight neck adjustment to make it great. But... this sounds like something you need to take up with Donner. I can only tell you what's in my hands.
Correct. There is no on/off button or switch. On all active preamp systems, the switch is actually in the stereo jack. The pickup is turned on when you plug in your cable or your headphones. Yes, leaving it plugged in when not in use will drain the battery, but unplugging it is the same as switching it off. For what it's worth, I have yet to change the battery in this guitar since I got it. Now, I don't play it every day, but it's well over a year of use with no issues.
i think if it could be modded to take an electric pickup, it would make a perfect one and done guitar. especially when travelling having access to both acoustic and electric sounds would be excellent. ive been on the lookout for a compact headless that i could either mod in a piezo pickup (if electric), or an electric pickup if it already has a piezo. adding in something like a seymour duncan p-rail would make for a truly versatile guitar that can take the place of many different guitars when travelling. im not sure the donner would be the right guitar for this, but at least thats my thought process for why i personally might want to mod in an electric pickup. tho i suspect at the price these are going for, it would cost the same amount again to set up the electronics for something like that.
I think you'd be better off looking for a suitable electric and then installing something like a Ghost Piezo from Graph Tech. Acoustics modded to be electrics always sound awful -- like putting a playing card in your bicycle spokes to "sound" like a motorcycle. The design, and more importantly the strings, just don't work through anything with any kind of gain. Since this one is set up to play, feel, and sound like an acoustic, the result would be similar. You'd need a much lighter steel or nickel wound string and a lower action, and then you'd lose what it is that makes it essentially play like an acoustic. You'll never quite get the best of both worlds. More like the best of one world, and maybe almost average of the other. I've build a couple of Swiss Army Knife guitars with multiple pickup voicings and a Ghost, and it's really hard to land on perfection for all the components. As an electric player, trying to do electric things on acoustic strings is just deeply unsatisfying.
@@woodsnstrings thanks for the info! ill definitely take that under advisement. ghost would be the ultimate option for sure. especially if i could fit in the midi stuff. tho at its price it would quickly take a budget travel guitar well into the mid-range guitar prices, which im not sure how much id want to travel with that given how easy it is to lose luggage. even without the option of modding, the donner seems a pretty amazing guitar for the price. its rare to see anything with that much design fore-thought for under 500. let alone something that innovative. ive been watching the proliferation of alibaba/aliexpress hardware for headless guitars, and so many of them seem to use those cheap all in one tuner/saddle units (like what is used on things like the EART headless guitars). its nice to see a company make something different
@@natalyakeane Josh at JHS has two sayings that I really like: "It's OK to just try stuff" and "if it sounds good, it is good." Don't let me stop you. I just don't think it's a good idea. When flying, this guitar is carry on size. Anything bigger, ask if you can gate check it.
@@woodsnstrings yeah. ive lost checked luggage a few times. as a result i dont like to check anything that i cant get at my destination. so carry on size is what im looking for. if i cant find a good sized electric headless to travel with (and mod in a piezo), ill get the donner as its definitely worth it as a practice instrument for the price
I've gotten two and the action is way too high even for an acoustic. They both needed a lot of truss rod adjustment (they were completely loose with too much relief) and the saddle has to come down a lot for nice acoustic action. One couldn't be adjusted enough so it went back.
I've got mine today. After adjusting the truss rod, it's on-par or a little bit lower than my aoustic guitars. It came with 11s strings. It's easier to play than my LX1E.
Searched hush1. Your review came up. Glad it did. Awesome review of this unit. Like your thoughtful approach and no BS, oh how refreshing & you covered features no other chanels did. Credit to you. Naturally I'm subscribed now. 1? In you opinion would the hush 1 be compatible with silk & steel strings? Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it! As for the strings, this guitar uses a piezo style pickup, which means it runs on vibration rather than on magnetic signal. That means any string will work on it without concern for the magnetic response of the string. However, the strings do need a ball end, as that's how they're held in place at the nut. So any string that would normally be tied off, like classical strings, wouldn't work. If your silk & steel strings have a ball end, they should work just fine. In fact, I think they would sound quite nice through an amplifier -- let me know if you get a chance to try them out. Or maybe I will on my next restring 🤔
@@woodsnstrings thanks for a very informative reply. I appreciate it. I will update you if I buy one. I'm still in the looking then but stage. But I sure like this unit, especially after your review. You know your stuff. Respect Bro.
If I were to plug headphones in, would it only make noise through the headphones or would there be sound coming from the body of the guitar as well? I want something I can practice and not disturb my family while they’re sleeping
It will sound about as loud as an unplugged electric guitar. It's still strings on a piece of wood. But in the headphones it will sound like an acoustic guitar.
You can use any guitar to practice strumming. This one is quiet (like an unplugged electric) but feels like an acoustic. If that's what suits your needs, then it's what I would recommend.
@@woodsnstrings i'm trying to preserve the sanity of those around me so the quieter for them (but louder for me) the better. Your Q&A is great. Your reply sealed the deal! I'm.trying to snag a used one. Thanks very much!
hello. wanna know if this guitar can only be played when the battery is inserted?. means that this guitar will not work without a battery even i plug into amplifier? sorry for my broken english
Hi. This guitar uses an active pickup circuit, meaning the pickup will not function without a battery. The strings will strum and the frets will work (quietly...there's no resonating chamber), but the onboard preamp won't send any signal to the amplifier without power. However, I've had this guitar for over a year and it's still on the original battery.
hey! I’m super new to guitar so this might be a bit of a dumb question but in terms of the tension on the strings, does it feel more like an acoustic guitar, and if so, how tight is it? I ask this because I have an old Yamaha acoustic guitar that I’m borrowing from my school while I learn, and the only reason I’m not practicing constantly is that the strings really dig into my fingers until it’s too painful to play. I don't have this issue at all with the electric guitar that's at my school, and I prefer its sound / feel. That being said, I don't really have the money to buy something too expensive and from what i can tell, the Donner Hush-I is the only one of this form factor at its price range, but I'm also really getting sick of lugging the big stupid hardcase for my acoustic to and from school, particularly in the middle of winter here in Canada. Anyway, what would you do in a scenario like this, would you say it'd be worth it? (Awesome video by the way, it was super informative and useful, thanks!)
The HUSH-I is set up like an acoustic, so it would be similar to your school's Yamaha. The solution for you is to have lighter strings put on the guitar.
None that I've seen. That's true for most headless guitars, but the body design on this one makes it harder to find something for it to rest on. The closest I've seen might be something like this from D'addario: www.daddario.com/products/accessories/care-maintenance-tools/guitar-supports/universal-neck-rest/ It'll hold it up against a table or a low amp. Might be worth a peek.
Brand new, it's about CAD $900-$1000 here. 2nd hand, I can find CAD $500 - $600. I was able to buy the Hush I for CAD $300 brand new. Compared to Yamaha, it's super compact. I won't bring the Yamaha on my trips. This one, I can bring anywhere. I think this is the main thing. It also fits my backpack. Yamaha for sure got a superior sound but for travel, this is just better.
I was hoping the Donner would be small enough to fit in my large suitcase which would make it even bearable for travel. But it doesn’t. Still too long.
I price the Yamaha SLG200s often, and no way are those $300. Average -- try $480 used and $700 new. Also, lots of acoustic amps have reverb, so that's no big deal unless someone plans to play with ear buds most of the time.
Nice Q&A but can you tell me what the intonation is like for all the strings? because I've played quite a few nice acoustic guitars ruined by bad intonation which is really difficult to fix because of the style of bridge
The intonation is actually quite good. They use a compensated saddle which helps a lot and is typical on the better built acoustics. A good luthier can easily hand intonate a saddle for you cheaper than buying a new guitar.
Yes. If you don't plug it in, it sounds a little softer than an unplugged electric. You can use the included headphones to listen to the acoustic tone privately while those around you just hear strings with very little volume.
I just ordered online. Watched all videos. Yours the most helpful one, thank you but still cant understand one thing. What for that aux-in input? What can i do, what can i get with it? Possibilities, benefits? Can you please give examples if it is complicated? I am not familiar with this stuff. Can i connect my phone with it and if i play spotify for example, can i play mu guitar on music from spotify and listen both sounds with the earphone? Is it it?
Good purchase! The aux input is for an aux cable from your phone or other player that allows you to play along with a recording. So, let's say you want to learn a song, and you've got the chords. You can plug your headphones in the headphone jack, and connect your phone with the track on Spotify or iTunes, and you can play along "silently" through your headphones. People nearby will of course still hear the strings acoustically, as they would on an electric guitar that's unplugged, but they won't hear the music track or the full tone of the guitar. It's great for an apartment or dorm where other people might be interrupted with a loud acoustic sound.
@@woodsnstrings It is so cool then. So i can play along with music, metronome, drum partitions etc. Lots of possibilities. Sadly no one mentioned that before. Not even on user manual! :) Thank you very much, all clear now.
Thank you for the great rewivew. I got the instrument, and I wanted to ask - how do you adjust the truss rod? I know it sounds weird, in theory shoud be lefty-loosey, righty-tighty, but I tried adjusting it both ways and it is so tight I'm scared it will snap. The thing is guitar has no relief and the action is quite low for and acoustic (I'd call it a medium-electric even). Any help would be appreciated.
You have it exactly right. Turning clockwise will tighten it and bend the fretboard towards the strings. Turing it left will add relief. A quarter turn ar a time is plenty, and tune it after each turn to check the action and buzz.
@@woodsnstrings If I could ask 1 more question - how do you play this (I mean the position)? I have to say it is the most uncomfortable guitar to play I ever tried - if you play sitting down it is way too low, and the worst thing is your right hand has no place to rest, it has to free float, causing extreme shoulder fatigue. And if you try playing standing up it neckdives like to SG ever did.
@@madeofnapalm if you play it on your left knee with your foot propped up (a better playing posture overall), you shouldn't have a problem really. I just play it like any guitar and haven't found it uncomfortable at all. I haven't tried it standing with a strap to test for neck dive, but it's not such a significantly heavy guitar -- or one built for shredding -- that I could see this being a serious issue. Again, it's not really meant for stage use as its primary function, so I'm guessing counterweighting the body wasn't consideration. However, in other cases (like some V's), the solution could be a wider strap with more friction, or you could simply coutnerweight the thing yourself. It's an incredibly light piece of gear though...I HAVE played it standing without even using a strap and had no issues.
The pickup would probably fit. I don't know where you would put the rest of the hardward but I'm sure people mount them on all sorts of things. If you get it working let me know.
I'm wondering how this does on flights. As a travel guitar I'm hoping to carry it on with me but I've seen one other person mentioning international lines will not allow it to be taken on.
I have no idea, but it is certainly compact enough to be a carry-on. It shouldn't be any different from any other guitar, but I suppose with all the pieces it could be a little confusing to someone who hasn't seen one before. I was once stopped for a search on a domestic flight because my laptop case had an Allen wrench in it. If they won't let you take it on as a carry-on, ask to gate check it. Most airlines have space for things like strollers and small instruments now.
I just ordered one strictly for travels, always via plane.. I hope this doesn’t become an issue. I want to learn to play so bad and figure what better way than time with one of these in my hotel room.
I could see it being convenient, compared to the bulk of an acoustic, for both transport and use. I haven't actually used it on stage, so I couldn't say if it's "ideal" or not. In the studio it gets a great sound, so I don't see why it wouldn't be useful for gigs.
No. I don't think any of Donner's guitars come in lefty options. I've had this question before, but it's something you'd all have to take up with them. Presumably enough voices requesting it would encourage them to pursue the option.
It has the same features as an acoustic guitar, so you would need to adjust the action the same way. Basically, acoustics only allow you to adjust the action by sanding or shimming the saddle or nut.
It isn't Bluetooth enabled. If you want to use a Bluetooth speaker like a Spark or an SD30i, you can certainly just plug it in like you would any guitar and use the acoustic amp settings. I use a Joyo wireless unit to plug it into my Mooer SD30i for playalong stuff.
I've watched about 30 videos on this thing, and none have any semblance of a usable acoustic tone. It's pretty sad, considering the guitar is value-priced and packed with features. However, it just sounds absolutely awful. No matter how you dress it up, this is an ELECTRIC guitar. It has minimal natural acoustics, and relies on amplification. It could really use Strat pickups in the neck and middle positions.
I can understand how that would be upsetting for you. If it helps you feel better, Donner introduced a headless electric version called the HUSH-X (that's 10, not "ex") at NAMM this year. They haven't set an official market release date (I asked...I'm on the list). It's not a synthesize or a modeler. I mean, it's a slab of hardwood with a piezo intended to be played through headphones (and here going dry into the recording with no effects and no impulse response), so I don't expect anyone would imagine it's going to sound like a concert dreadnought. But -- and I'm just putting it out there -- you could just not buy one. That would probably save you a lot of trouble.
I just bought one and as with many new guitars that you buy, you need to have it fine tuned by either you or a luthier. One thing that was needing adjustment (filing/grinding ) was the ridiculously high bridge nut. It is what it is it's a $250 guitar. Sounds pretty good and has a good feel about it.
I just picked one of these up to take on a 3 week vacation in July. Sadly, I'm probably going to return it because the action is impossibly high. Over 4mm at the 12th fret, which is significantly more than either of my acoustics with the same string gauge. I can probably lower it a bit with a new saddle, but I think I'm just going to return it and spend a little more and TG Ultralight. It's a shame too, because I love the design of the Donner. It's just a bit of a chore to play.
I can't speak to yours specifically, but any new guitar should get a setup. Try checking the neck relief first before going after the saddle. 4mm is really high, but that screams neck bow to me.
I totally agree. The high action renders it useless.
I appreciate this review. I’ve never played guitar before but it’s my goal for 2023. I think I’ll start with this
How is it going for you? Don't give up!
@@TomislavIvanFlis I ended up buying an Affinity Stratocaster, threw some new strings, tusk nut, tuning trees and thornbucker on to replace my stock humbuckers. It’s been a lot of fun getting the hang of new songs
Great review - many reviews are just see how much noise I can make, I really appreciate a “this is how it is” review. Thanks very much.
OMG! I was wondering why the guitar strap had those clips on it!!!!!!! Hahaha. My complicated analysis of this strap made me crazy! Thanks for explaining that it was also the bag strap!!!!!?? 😂
Awesome review! Just got mine a few days ago and I can confirm that this thing has had some serious thought put into it. Most importantly, I totally agree that it does exactly what it advertises. If you need something light, portable, and quiet this is 100% the guitar. However, I do wish it could be a bit quieter. I'm a student, and want to be able to practice in a dorm type setting without worrying about bothering a roommate. I've found that if you just turn up the volume quite a bit its a decent way to practice strumming quite softly, but you can also put some cloth between some of the strings to really mute the sound.
See if you can find a hard felt ukulele pick. They do wonders for quiet strumming.
Another thing you can do is what generations of people have done before: practice in your room ;)
Ive just acquired one of these guitars and the high action made it unplayable. It’s a common issue with this instrument. It’s built for acoustic strings (10’s) so that is about as light as you can go given the bridge is designed to take a wound 3rd. It’s with my guitar luthier now who is trying to make it playable. He didn’t seem that hopeful. I’ll demo it when I get it back. Fennah Rob 👍🏻
Have you tried doing a setup? Mine was one of the first in Canada and took a very slight neck adjustment to make it great.
But... this sounds like something you need to take up with Donner. I can only tell you what's in my hands.
10 seconds in and I've already subscribed for being called a "string-a-ling". 😄
Amazinggg name haha, looking forward to seeing more of your vids
@Djckw2 your enthusiasm is what inspired me to put it on a t-shirt 😀
Hello, I was wondering, does the Donner Hush-I turn off by itself when it isn't in use or continue to drain the battery?
There is no on/off button
Correct. There is no on/off button or switch. On all active preamp systems, the switch is actually in the stereo jack. The pickup is turned on when you plug in your cable or your headphones. Yes, leaving it plugged in when not in use will drain the battery, but unplugging it is the same as switching it off.
For what it's worth, I have yet to change the battery in this guitar since I got it. Now, I don't play it every day, but it's well over a year of use with no issues.
@@woodsnstrings awesome, thankyou heaps 🙏
I wish they would bring out a nylon string version.
Heads up....A good honest review on the guitar....You keep it real all the time on this video.
Love the review.. ❤
i think if it could be modded to take an electric pickup, it would make a perfect one and done guitar. especially when travelling having access to both acoustic and electric sounds would be excellent.
ive been on the lookout for a compact headless that i could either mod in a piezo pickup (if electric), or an electric pickup if it already has a piezo. adding in something like a seymour duncan p-rail would make for a truly versatile guitar that can take the place of many different guitars when travelling. im not sure the donner would be the right guitar for this, but at least thats my thought process for why i personally might want to mod in an electric pickup. tho i suspect at the price these are going for, it would cost the same amount again to set up the electronics for something like that.
I think you'd be better off looking for a suitable electric and then installing something like a Ghost Piezo from Graph Tech. Acoustics modded to be electrics always sound awful -- like putting a playing card in your bicycle spokes to "sound" like a motorcycle. The design, and more importantly the strings, just don't work through anything with any kind of gain. Since this one is set up to play, feel, and sound like an acoustic, the result would be similar. You'd need a much lighter steel or nickel wound string and a lower action, and then you'd lose what it is that makes it essentially play like an acoustic.
You'll never quite get the best of both worlds. More like the best of one world, and maybe almost average of the other. I've build a couple of Swiss Army Knife guitars with multiple pickup voicings and a Ghost, and it's really hard to land on perfection for all the components. As an electric player, trying to do electric things on acoustic strings is just deeply unsatisfying.
@@woodsnstrings thanks for the info! ill definitely take that under advisement.
ghost would be the ultimate option for sure. especially if i could fit in the midi stuff. tho at its price it would quickly take a budget travel guitar well into the mid-range guitar prices, which im not sure how much id want to travel with that given how easy it is to lose luggage.
even without the option of modding, the donner seems a pretty amazing guitar for the price. its rare to see anything with that much design fore-thought for under 500. let alone something that innovative. ive been watching the proliferation of alibaba/aliexpress hardware for headless guitars, and so many of them seem to use those cheap all in one tuner/saddle units (like what is used on things like the EART headless guitars). its nice to see a company make something different
@@natalyakeane Josh at JHS has two sayings that I really like:
"It's OK to just try stuff" and "if it sounds good, it is good."
Don't let me stop you. I just don't think it's a good idea.
When flying, this guitar is carry on size. Anything bigger, ask if you can gate check it.
@@woodsnstrings yeah. ive lost checked luggage a few times. as a result i dont like to check anything that i cant get at my destination. so carry on size is what im looking for. if i cant find a good sized electric headless to travel with (and mod in a piezo), ill get the donner as its definitely worth it as a practice instrument for the price
Donner just presented the new hush-x that is electric with PUs
I've gotten two and the action is way too high even for an acoustic. They both needed a lot of truss rod adjustment (they were completely loose with too much relief) and the saddle has to come down a lot for nice acoustic action. One couldn't be adjusted enough so it went back.
I've got mine today. After adjusting the truss rod, it's on-par or a little bit lower than my aoustic guitars. It came with 11s strings. It's easier to play than my LX1E.
@@ExtraRice.101You didn’t have to sand down the saddle?
Searched hush1. Your review came up. Glad it did. Awesome review of this unit. Like your thoughtful approach and no BS, oh how refreshing & you covered features no other chanels did. Credit to you. Naturally I'm subscribed now. 1? In you opinion would the hush 1 be compatible with silk & steel strings? Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it!
As for the strings, this guitar uses a piezo style pickup, which means it runs on vibration rather than on magnetic signal. That means any string will work on it without concern for the magnetic response of the string. However, the strings do need a ball end, as that's how they're held in place at the nut. So any string that would normally be tied off, like classical strings, wouldn't work. If your silk & steel strings have a ball end, they should work just fine. In fact, I think they would sound quite nice through an amplifier -- let me know if you get a chance to try them out.
Or maybe I will on my next restring 🤔
@@woodsnstrings thanks for a very informative reply. I appreciate it. I will update you if I buy one. I'm still in the looking then but stage. But I sure like this unit, especially after your review. You know your stuff. Respect Bro.
Thanks for the helpful video!
If I were to plug headphones in, would it only make noise through the headphones or would there be sound coming from the body of the guitar as well? I want something I can practice and not disturb my family while they’re sleeping
It will sound about as loud as an unplugged electric guitar. It's still strings on a piece of wood. But in the headphones it will sound like an acoustic guitar.
Would you recommend this for practicing strumming?
You can use any guitar to practice strumming. This one is quiet (like an unplugged electric) but feels like an acoustic. If that's what suits your needs, then it's what I would recommend.
@@woodsnstrings i'm trying to preserve the sanity of those around me so the quieter for them (but louder for me) the better. Your Q&A is great. Your reply sealed the deal! I'm.trying to snag a used one. Thanks very much!
hello. wanna know if this guitar can only be played when the battery is inserted?. means that this guitar will not work without a battery even i plug into amplifier? sorry for my broken english
Hi. This guitar uses an active pickup circuit, meaning the pickup will not function without a battery. The strings will strum and the frets will work (quietly...there's no resonating chamber), but the onboard preamp won't send any signal to the amplifier without power.
However, I've had this guitar for over a year and it's still on the original battery.
@@woodsnstrings ok i see that. so it looks like battery using won't be an issue right?. nice. thank for reply ya
hey! I’m super new to guitar so this might be a bit of a dumb question but in terms of the tension on the strings, does it feel more like an acoustic guitar, and if so, how tight is it?
I ask this because I have an old Yamaha acoustic guitar that I’m borrowing from my school while I learn, and the only reason I’m not practicing constantly is that the strings really dig into my fingers until it’s too painful to play. I don't have this issue at all with the electric guitar that's at my school, and I prefer its sound / feel.
That being said, I don't really have the money to buy something too expensive and from what i can tell, the Donner Hush-I is the only one of this form factor at its price range, but I'm also really getting sick of lugging the big stupid hardcase for my acoustic to and from school, particularly in the middle of winter here in Canada.
Anyway, what would you do in a scenario like this, would you say it'd be worth it?
(Awesome video by the way, it was super informative and useful, thanks!)
The HUSH-I is set up like an acoustic, so it would be similar to your school's Yamaha.
The solution for you is to have lighter strings put on the guitar.
@@woodsnstrings alright awesome, I'll keep that in mind. Thanks!!
Is there a floor stand/rack that works with this?
None that I've seen. That's true for most headless guitars, but the body design on this one makes it harder to find something for it to rest on. The closest I've seen might be something like this from D'addario: www.daddario.com/products/accessories/care-maintenance-tools/guitar-supports/universal-neck-rest/ It'll hold it up against a table or a low amp. Might be worth a peek.
They have an electric guitar version now
If you ever played the Yamaha silent guitar, you'd understand why you'd want reverb. It makes a huge difference in the experience. Much better.
Brand new, it's about CAD $900-$1000 here. 2nd hand, I can find CAD $500 - $600. I was able to buy the Hush I for CAD $300 brand new. Compared to Yamaha, it's super compact. I won't bring the Yamaha on my trips. This one, I can bring anywhere. I think this is the main thing. It also fits my backpack. Yamaha for sure got a superior sound but for travel, this is just better.
I was hoping the Donner would be small enough to fit in my large suitcase which would make it even bearable for travel. But it doesn’t. Still too long.
I price the Yamaha SLG200s often, and no way are those $300. Average -- try $480 used and $700 new. Also, lots of acoustic amps have reverb, so that's no big deal unless someone plans to play with ear buds most of the time.
Nice Q&A but can you tell me what the intonation is like for all the strings? because I've played quite a few nice acoustic guitars ruined by bad intonation which is really difficult to fix because of the style of bridge
The intonation is actually quite good. They use a compensated saddle which helps a lot and is typical on the better built acoustics. A good luthier can easily hand intonate a saddle for you cheaper than buying a new guitar.
@@woodsnstrings thanks for the info, this guitar is becoming more appealing all the time :)
So you can play it without amp too, right?at very low volume
Yes. If you don't plug it in, it sounds a little softer than an unplugged electric. You can use the included headphones to listen to the acoustic tone privately while those around you just hear strings with very little volume.
Can i do the truss rod adjustment to lower the action?
@@AnupamPanda-iq6to yes
I just ordered online. Watched all videos. Yours the most helpful one, thank you but still cant understand one thing. What for that aux-in input? What can i do, what can i get with it? Possibilities, benefits? Can you please give examples if it is complicated? I am not familiar with this stuff. Can i connect my phone with it and if i play spotify for example, can i play mu guitar on music from spotify and listen both sounds with the earphone? Is it it?
Good purchase! The aux input is for an aux cable from your phone or other player that allows you to play along with a recording. So, let's say you want to learn a song, and you've got the chords. You can plug your headphones in the headphone jack, and connect your phone with the track on Spotify or iTunes, and you can play along "silently" through your headphones. People nearby will of course still hear the strings acoustically, as they would on an electric guitar that's unplugged, but they won't hear the music track or the full tone of the guitar. It's great for an apartment or dorm where other people might be interrupted with a loud acoustic sound.
@@woodsnstrings It is so cool then. So i can play along with music, metronome, drum partitions etc. Lots of possibilities. Sadly no one mentioned that before. Not even on user manual! :) Thank you very much, all clear now.
@@HakanGil I also had no idea it had a aux passthrough until mine came in the mail and I saw there was a second 3.5mm jack
@@CalebStratton It works fine and i think it is a very useful feature. Weird that the company didnt mention it anywhere.
Thank you for the great rewivew. I got the instrument, and I wanted to ask - how do you adjust the truss rod? I know it sounds weird, in theory shoud be lefty-loosey, righty-tighty, but I tried adjusting it both ways and it is so tight I'm scared it will snap. The thing is guitar has no relief and the action is quite low for and acoustic (I'd call it a medium-electric even). Any help would be appreciated.
You have it exactly right. Turning clockwise will tighten it and bend the fretboard towards the strings. Turing it left will add relief. A quarter turn ar a time is plenty, and tune it after each turn to check the action and buzz.
@@woodsnstrings If I could ask 1 more question - how do you play this (I mean the position)? I have to say it is the most uncomfortable guitar to play I ever tried - if you play sitting down it is way too low, and the worst thing is your right hand has no place to rest, it has to free float, causing extreme shoulder fatigue. And if you try playing standing up it neckdives like to SG ever did.
@@madeofnapalm if you play it on your left knee with your foot propped up (a better playing posture overall), you shouldn't have a problem really. I just play it like any guitar and haven't found it uncomfortable at all. I haven't tried it standing with a strap to test for neck dive, but it's not such a significantly heavy guitar -- or one built for shredding -- that I could see this being a serious issue.
Again, it's not really meant for stage use as its primary function, so I'm guessing counterweighting the body wasn't consideration. However, in other cases (like some V's), the solution could be a wider strap with more friction, or you could simply coutnerweight the thing yourself. It's an incredibly light piece of gear though...I HAVE played it standing without even using a strap and had no issues.
Can it be left handed change ghe string upside doen
You could try but the bridge is compensated for intonation so you'll likely run into issues there.
is it possible to mount a Roland GK3 pickup for synth control?
The pickup would probably fit. I don't know where you would put the rest of the hardward but I'm sure people mount them on all sorts of things. If you get it working let me know.
Got my hush I today and i have tought time playing due to its high action. Can you suggest me how to lower them?
I think rather than mounting pick up, you should go ahead and buy Hush X.
Check the neck relief. You may need to straighten it.
Where does the tuner go?
That literally has its own chapter in the video index.
I'm wondering how this does on flights. As a travel guitar I'm hoping to carry it on with me but I've seen one other person mentioning international lines will not allow it to be taken on.
I have no idea, but it is certainly compact enough to be a carry-on. It shouldn't be any different from any other guitar, but I suppose with all the pieces it could be a little confusing to someone who hasn't seen one before. I was once stopped for a search on a domestic flight because my laptop case had an Allen wrench in it.
If they won't let you take it on as a carry-on, ask to gate check it. Most airlines have space for things like strollers and small instruments now.
I just ordered one strictly for travels, always via plane.. I hope this doesn’t become an issue. I want to learn to play so bad and figure what better way than time with one of these in my hotel room.
Is it ideal to use it on gigs?
I could see it being convenient, compared to the bulk of an acoustic, for both transport and use. I haven't actually used it on stage, so I couldn't say if it's "ideal" or not. In the studio it gets a great sound, so I don't see why it wouldn't be useful for gigs.
Is there a left hand option?
No. I don't think any of Donner's guitars come in lefty options. I've had this question before, but it's something you'd all have to take up with them. Presumably enough voices requesting it would encourage them to pursue the option.
Can it be used with nylon strings?
Possibly, but I wouldn't advise it. The head is designed for ball ends, and the tuning pegs might not hold onto a nylon string.
Are you able to adjust action
Outside of adjusting neck relief
It has the same features as an acoustic guitar, so you would need to adjust the action the same way. Basically, acoustics only allow you to adjust the action by sanding or shimming the saddle or nut.
Can I pair this to Bluetooth speaker if I don’t need to use headphones
It isn't Bluetooth enabled. If you want to use a Bluetooth speaker like a Spark or an SD30i, you can certainly just plug it in like you would any guitar and use the acoustic amp settings. I use a Joyo wireless unit to plug it into my Mooer SD30i for playalong stuff.
The written specs from Donner say they're 10s. I agree they feel stiffer than 10s.
Maybe because it's a shorter "scale" than a normal guitar (?) ... so the tension is higher.
Can you use nylon strings on this guitar?
Possibly, but I wouldn't advise it. The head is designed for ball ends, and the tuning pegs might not hold onto a nylon string.
I would say a person could get creative and mount a tuner into the wood if they wanted a built in tuner
is there a lefty version?
Sorry no.
If it's still bothering people then you're hanging around the wrong people.
Tuning like that is a deal breaker
@@carlbullaro7616 your refund is in the mail.
I've watched about 30 videos on this thing, and none have any semblance of a usable acoustic tone. It's pretty sad, considering the guitar is value-priced and packed with features. However, it just sounds absolutely awful. No matter how you dress it up, this is an ELECTRIC guitar. It has minimal natural acoustics, and relies on amplification. It could really use Strat pickups in the neck and middle positions.
I can understand how that would be upsetting for you. If it helps you feel better, Donner introduced a headless electric version called the HUSH-X (that's 10, not "ex") at NAMM this year. They haven't set an official market release date (I asked...I'm on the list).
It's not a synthesize or a modeler. I mean, it's a slab of hardwood with a piezo intended to be played through headphones (and here going dry into the recording with no effects and no impulse response), so I don't expect anyone would imagine it's going to sound like a concert dreadnought.
But -- and I'm just putting it out there -- you could just not buy one. That would probably save you a lot of trouble.
Interesting, but... how much can you whine about someone asking for reverb?
quit whining
Should turn off the BGM
Thise guitar have worst sound, i ever heared. A'm disappointed.
Don't buy a guitar without knowing what strings it comes with, period.
No Transparency: No Sale.
What difference does it make what strings it comes with? You'll have to change them after a while anyway!
@@leecasss It looks as though reading isn't your forte. Did you read the part about the transparency. Guess not.