burnsbonkers wrote:Hi , I've tried one of the sonics you have , although I think it would be technically correct to label the new guitars as "Burns of Korea " it did play Fantastic with a lovely action.
Something I'm not that familiar with after years of dealing with old dodgy guitars!.
I'd hurry ... the way things are going : there may not be a Korea anymore, so get another one.
I agree the Sonic has a different vibe in terms of looks compared to most vintage Burns. That doesn't worry me because I took it at face value and liked what I heard and saw.
Fingers crossed for Korea. I'm not too worried about where they are made (Korea/China/London) as I am also keen on Schecter Guitars, which went down the same manufacturing route as Burns, only a few years earlier. I used to be on their forum and , besides a few reported fret crowning issues, when they switched to China in the late 2000's the quality remained consistently high. I have a newly acquired Double Six, which could well be Chinese and the construction is top notch. It's a shame that they don't make more in the UK but with global competition I guess they would cost too much
Regarding my Sonic, I did think of getting another but I can't play two and it wouldn't be identical as mine is quite unusual. It has 3 Tri-sonic pups, a 5 way switch + the tone pops up for more switching options. The current Sonic has 2 pups and 4 way switch. Mine also has a different name on the name plate of "Burns Sonic Deluxe" and a cool serial number of 0001. It is part of their Custom Elite Series.
I contacted Barry Gibson to see if it was a prototype but he couldn't recall it. It's beautifully set up and I was told that it had been around a few shows before it found its way to the store. Anyway I love it and bought it to play. I think they should produce more as its a very versatile and good handling guitar.
Glad to hear someone else likes them. Not sure that there are many of them about.