Erno is one of the best guitarists on RUclips. Awesome experience listening to him. He can really push a guitar to its limits to demonstrate its strengths and weaknesses and sound range. Thank you!!
Thanks your comment Dan. I always try to show the real sound of each guitar. Sometimes it is not easy, but we are focusing to make demo of guitars and not on the player skills. Thanks to follow us and share our vids is much appreciated.
I used to believe rosewood was the best choice for a premium guitar. Used to. I got an E20D (big brother to this guitar) and it blows me away with the tone, power, sustain and overtones. I tried an E20OM yesterday and am now selling some rosewood guitars so I can buy it.
@@Joe-m6p6b You are absolutely correct. Good catch. I have no clue why I wrote E20OM. The guitar I tried back then was an E10D. That was when I discovered that I really like mahogany that can be played soft or hard and still retain it's open woody tones and clarity. My comment was totally irrelevant anyway since I was talking dreadnoughts and this post is about an OM sized guitar. To bring this almost full circle, I own an E40OM-SB, which is basically the same guitar as an E20OM but with abalone inlay. It sounds fantastic, just like the guitar in this video.
Hello, the main difference is all Eastman traditional OM has shorter scale is 24.9", Furch is 25.5" (Furch short scale is too short under 24.9"). Eastman has more stronger sound in middles. Also the nut width of Eastman is a little less than Furch 45mm, Eastman 44.5mm...Furch sounds more modern like (scooped mids with huge resonance and brights). The quality of build is on the same level
Erno is one of the best guitarists on RUclips. Awesome experience listening to him. He can really push a guitar to its limits to demonstrate its strengths and weaknesses and sound range. Thank you!!
Thanks your comment Dan. I always try to show the real sound of each guitar. Sometimes it is not easy, but we are focusing to make demo of guitars and not on the player skills. Thanks to follow us and share our vids is much appreciated.
I agree.
I used to believe rosewood was the best choice for a premium guitar. Used to. I got an E20D (big brother to this guitar) and it blows me away with the tone, power, sustain and overtones. I tried an E20OM yesterday and am now selling some rosewood guitars so I can buy it.
The E 20 OM IS a rosewood guitar...
@@Joe-m6p6b You are absolutely correct. Good catch. I have no clue why I wrote E20OM. The guitar I tried back then was an E10D. That was when I discovered that I really like mahogany that can be played soft or hard and still retain it's open woody tones and clarity. My comment was totally irrelevant anyway since I was talking dreadnoughts and this post is about an OM sized guitar. To bring this almost full circle, I own an E40OM-SB, which is basically the same guitar as an E20OM but with abalone inlay. It sounds fantastic, just like the guitar in this video.
Midway thru the video I understood why this has no dislikes
How would this compare to a Furch Om series guitar. I am considering one or the other...thanks
Hello, the main difference is all Eastman traditional OM has shorter scale is 24.9", Furch is 25.5" (Furch short scale is too short under 24.9"). Eastman has more stronger sound in middles. Also the nut width of Eastman is a little less than Furch 45mm, Eastman 44.5mm...Furch sounds more modern like (scooped mids with huge resonance and brights). The quality of build is on the same level
@@Stageshopguitars thanks for that I much appreciate it. Plus thanks for all your videos and great playing.