Guitarist

PRS Custom 24-08

FRom £3,565

- ContaCt PRS Europe Phone 01223 874301 Web www.prsguitars.com

It’s a question we get asked a lot: which PRS guitar is right for me? Certainly if your budget stretches to the £3k and upwards USA-made Core line it’s even more important to find the right model. If we zone in on the classic double-cut shape, with vibrato and without piezo, there are seven: the Custom 24 and 22, plus the Custom 24 Floyd, the 408, 509, Paul’s Guitar (the only model with optional Stoptail or vibrato) and the David Grissom DGT signature. They all share the same outline (the 509 being very slightly different), the same 635mm (25”) original scale length – with the exception of the 509’s 641mm (25.25”) – with 22 frets, aside from the Custom 24s, and dual humbuckers with a master volume (only the DGT has individual volume controls) and a master tone.

The difference­s primarily lie in the pickups: the Customs have uncovered 85/15s (with the exception of the Custom 24 Floyd which uses the uncovered \m/ humbuckers); the 408 has its eponymous larger bridge and smaller neck humbuckers; Paul’s Guitar goes for two of the smaller 408 neck humbuckers. The 509 has the 513-style five single coils, and the DGT offers David Grissom’s own-blend covered ‘buckers. As of November 2017, we have another Core option, the Custom 24-08.

The 24-08 first appeared back in 2016 as a 50 piece-only limited run released at the time of PRS’s in-house Experience event and you’ll find numerous subsequent dealer-ordered ‘Wood Library’ versions available. Our review model comes from that latter camp although it’s identical to the new standard Core model but to bypass the new CITES legislatio­n has an ebony, as opposed to the standard model’s rosewood, fingerboar­d.

The 2017 Custom 24 has certainly evolved from its original 1985 specificat­ion with virtually every part being constantly re-evaluated and improved over the years. It retains that outline and original 49mm depth – the thinnest Core model. Aside from the ‘08’ part, the other new feature for this year is the Gen III vibrato which now replaces the long-running second generation version on all the Core models with the exception of the Custom 24 Floyd.

While there’s a pretty big range of eyecatchin­g colour V12 finishes, options are limited. You can choose neck shape – either pattern regular or pattern thin (as here) which to old-school PRS players are pretty similar to the previous regular and widethin shapes – and a figured maple 10 top (as here, which defaults to hybrid gold/ nickel hardware over the non-10-top’s nickel). Then there’s the Artist Package option which adds a more significan­t outlay. But simple things like dot inlays instead of the ubiquitous birds or gold hardware, let alone a left-handed version, are not offered.

only here can you get the single coil-like clarity and harmonic detail, from both the neck and bridge

Feel & Sounds

Pulling a current-spec Custom 24 from its weighty hard case you can’t help but be impressed by the craft. Yes, of course, the cost means you shouldn’t expect anything less, but production guitar-making doesn’t get better than this. It is beautifull­y weighted, feels like a supermodel and so long as the aesthetic appeals, you’ll find it’s a guitar for life.

By design, it sits between the two generic landmarks, the Gibson Les Paul and the Fender Stratocast­er, both in build style and the sounds we hear. There’s less bulk, in feel and sound, compared to a single-cut and while there’s something of the Strat’s feel in the lighter weight and strapped on feel (although the neck feels longer despite the shorter 25-inch scale) the sonic selections are more Gibson than Fender.

So what does the 24-08 bring to the table? Well, unlike the standard Custom’s wiring, you can run the Custom 24-08 as, for example, a pretty convincing single coil guitar: neck, both and mixed. You’ll notice the neck pickup is reversed so that the primary coils, the slug coils, both face the neck creating a very woody character at neck and a fuller, less spiky voice at the bridge.

Does it nail a Strat’s voice? Both the solo neck or bridge single coils sound a little more ‘humbucking’, a little smoother in the highs and thicker in the lower mids and lows: less choppy. You can narrow the gap with a little volume reduction and, of course, the bridge and neck combinatio­n has wider spaced coils than a Strat: it’s more Tele-ish if we’re honest. There’s only one sound on the Custom 24 to directly compare with, that’s the bridge and neck single coil mix which, with its closer placement of the two slug coils, sounds a little more Strat-mix-like than the 24-08 which sounds wider, less ‘quacky’ and less thin and bright.

But certainly if you want that single coillike clarity and harmonic detail, from both the neck or bridge, which you can’t get on the standard Custom, it’s here. You might want the full ‘bucker at bridge then switch to the neck in single coil for a cleaner, more defined sound – or indeed vice versa. There is also very little volume drop, too, between the two modes.

Yet running the 24-08 as a ‘Gibson’ in humbucking mode it again hints at all sorts of references especially as we kick in various pedals. In fact, the modern pedalboard culture has influenced the pickups PRS is making. “As pedalboard­s get more extensive,” says Paul, “PRS guitars get clearer and cleaner. It’s not the driver for me but it’s the driver for the market.

It has beautiful weight and feel: production guitar-making doesn’t get any better

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 ??  ?? Along with the two existing Custom 24s and the Santana Retro, the 24-08 is the fourth 24-fret Core PRS – the rest have 22 frets. Along with the extra two frets, the 24-fret models condense the space for the pickups, subtly altering the sounds you hear...
Along with the two existing Custom 24s and the Santana Retro, the 24-08 is the fourth 24-fret Core PRS – the rest have 22 frets. Along with the extra two frets, the 24-fret models condense the space for the pickups, subtly altering the sounds you hear...

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