Guitarist

PrS CE 24 Semi-Hollow ‘Reclaimed limited’ Custom

A semi-solid, 24-fret bolt-on using woods you’ve never heard of? Welcome to PRS’s ‘Reclaimed Limited’ CE 24

- Words Dave Burrluck

Using recycled or reclaimed wood for guitars is far from a new concept, not least in the light of the current problems the industry faces with the new CITES rosewood restrictio­ns. So using unusual and unusually sourced materials seems to have gone mainstream. At this year’s NAMM show, for example, Fender launched its Exotic Series using some reclaimed woods, and now PRS has joined the fray with a limited run (approximat­ely 600 pieces) of two guitars featuring old wood from the Atlantic Forest area of south-eastern Brazil for both the top and fingerboar­d, sourced by senior wood manager, Michael Reid.

“Brauna preto (Melanoxylo­n brauna) was typically used as supporting posts for houses in the state of Minas Gerais in Brazil,” explains Michael. “Found only in the Atlantic Forest [Mata Atlantica] of south-eastern Brazil, it is only available now as salvaged or reclaimed wood, as commercial cutting of timber is no longer permitted in the Atlantic Forest. It has

a close grain similar to ebony and the colour ranges from dark brown to charcoal black. It is used occasional­ly by luthiers in Brazil for fingerboar­ds.”

The wood for the carved top is called peroba rosa (Aspidosper­ma polyneuron) and is also native to the Atlantic Forest, as Michael Reid explains: “It was very popular for use as siding in rural houses and farm buildings, primarily in the states of Paraná and Santa Catarina in southern Brazil. It is a very popular reclaimed wood in Brazil, commonly used for furniture and architectu­ral applicatio­ns. I don’t believe anyone has ever used this wood to make guitars. Rosa in Portuguese means pink and obviously refers to the colour, which can range from pinkish yellow to almost purple.”

This reclaimed wood is used on two natural satin nitrocellu­lose-finished guitars, the CE 24 and Vela. Both come in new semi-solid style, because apparently the top wood is relatively heavy. It certainly mixes the styles a little and our bolt-on CE 24 Semi-Hollow is nicely weighted (slightly under the standard solidbody CE 24) with a journeyman player’s vibe – quite a contrast to PRS’s ‘posh’ aesthetic. While some images we’ve seen show a more ‘exotic’ figured top, the two-piece centre-joined top here is quite plain, a medium caramel

“Brauna preto is only available as salvaged or reclaimed wood, as commercial cutting of timber is no longer permitted”

brown with light figure and even a small unfilled ding (a nail hole, apparently) just to the side of the volume control. The flat satin finish cries out for a little burnishing, or even subtle staining, which might have lifted the figure – the slab sawn one-piece back has quite a dramatic figure, especially on its sides. The fingerboar­d looks rosewood-like until you notice some subtle striped figuring, parallel to the frets, in the lower fingerboar­d positions.

It’s a typically clean build. The single bass-side f-hole, like the rest of the guitar, is unbound, but you can feel inside of it – the bass-side is pretty hollow and the air extends to behind the bridge, but not into the treble side.

Constructi­on aside, it’s the same setup as either of the existing CE 24s: top-lock tuners, pattern wide neck profile, dual uncovered 85/15 pickups with partial coilsplits. It’s a ‘halfway between Core and S2 level’ model: S2 hardware (PRS designed Korean-made) and S2-style neck (threepiece with head-splice and additional heel stack), but the pickups are made in the USA. The top carve of the Core-level body is shallower than the standard carve (with no indents under the controls) and neither the rear cover plates for the vibrato springs nor the electronic­s are recessed, but sit proud.

Feel & Sounds

Irrespecti­ve of its production level, this is one very fit-for-action guitar. The neck needed a slight tweak to introduce a little relief (it’s a two-way rod so that’s swiftly done) and it’s very stable tuning-wise, too, even with some pretty energetic whammy action. Sound-wise, there’s a good resonating acoustic response, not overly hollow-sounding, with a slightly rounded

and less zingy treble than our reference McCarty. If the partially hollow build adds a little thickness to the voice, then it’s lapped up by the 85/15 pickups. In the partial coilsplit mode, the single-coil sounds are strong and clear but far from brittle, with an almost marimba-like percussive character. There’s not a huge volume leap into the full ’bucker tones, but enough to change the character into a bigger rock voice that again sounds strong and quite focused. Despite the treble bleed cap, pulling the volume back likewise pulls back some spike and, like any good instrument, you seem to discover another subtlety every time you plug in.

Verdict

This is an interestin­g take on a PRS bolt-on, and whatever the wood choice and semisolid constructi­on are bringing to the table, it’s hugely viable while offering a different aesthetic – not to mention backstory – with a slightly pushier, midrange-coloured take on the CE 24. There’s certainly collector appeal, too, but enough sonic difference to also make this a viable addition to PRS’s bolt-on canon.

if the partially hollow build adds a little thickness to the voice, then it’s lapped up by the 85/15 pickups

 ?? Photograph­y Neil Godwin ??
Photograph­y Neil Godwin
 ??  ?? 1 1. PRS’s senior wood manager, Michael Reid, discovered this Brazilian peroba rosa top wood “while looking for something unusual to use in building my house in Montana”, he tells us
1 1. PRS’s senior wood manager, Michael Reid, discovered this Brazilian peroba rosa top wood “while looking for something unusual to use in building my house in Montana”, he tells us
 ??  ?? 2 2. The other reclaimed wood is the ’board’s brauna preto. “I decided to take a portion of the profits from selling some of this wood and donate it to several endangered species projects specifical­ly in the Atlantic Forest,” says Michael Reid
2 2. The other reclaimed wood is the ’board’s brauna preto. “I decided to take a portion of the profits from selling some of this wood and donate it to several endangered species projects specifical­ly in the Atlantic Forest,” says Michael Reid
 ??  ?? 3 3. The other notable feature is the SemiHollow style – the other CE 24s are all-solid. This, plus the S2 Vela SemiHollow, join the existing S2 semis: the Custom 22, Mira and Singlecut
3 3. The other notable feature is the SemiHollow style – the other CE 24s are all-solid. This, plus the S2 Vela SemiHollow, join the existing S2 semis: the Custom 22, Mira and Singlecut
 ??  ?? Like the other CE 24s in the catalogue, we get dual 85/15 humbuckers, uncovered versions of PRS’s 58/15s. Control is simple, but the pull-push tone control voices a partial coil-split for full-bodied single-coil voices 4
Like the other CE 24s in the catalogue, we get dual 85/15 humbuckers, uncovered versions of PRS’s 58/15s. Control is simple, but the pull-push tone control voices a partial coil-split for full-bodied single-coil voices 4
 ??  ?? The hardware here is the same as the S2 instrument­s (which are USA-designed and Korean-made), but functions perfectly 5
The hardware here is the same as the S2 instrument­s (which are USA-designed and Korean-made), but functions perfectly 5

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