Ibanez PF15WC Dreadnought Acoustic Guitar (with Case)

No longer available at zZounds
An incredible value, the PF15WC dreadnought from Ibanez is packed with crisp, focused tone, thanks to its spruce top and maghogany back and sides.

The Ibanez PF15 Perfomance series has professional features and a great sound in an acoustic dreadnought design. Easy playability and a robust sound combined with clear attack and a full low-end presence, the PF15 is a very popular instrument among musicians. Combining a spruce top with mahogany back and sides, the PF15 is built with the same materials you're likely to see in guitars costing hundreds more.

Features:

- Dreadnought Body
- Spruce Top
- Mahogany Back and Sides
- Black and White Multi Rosette
- Chrome Die-Cast Tuners
- Natural High Gloss Finish
- Case Included

Body Shape: Dreadnought body
Bracing: X Bracing
Top: Spruce
Back & Sides: Mahogany
Neck: Mahogany
Fretboard: Rosewood
Bridge: Rosewood
Body Binding: Ivory
Tuning Machine: Chrome Die-cast Tuner
Number of Frets: 20
Bridge Pins: Ibanez Advantage Bridge pin
Strings: Coated bronze strings
Finish Top: Gloss
Finish Back and Sides: Gloss
Finish Neck Back: Gloss

Neck Dimensions

-Scale 650mm
-Width at Nut 42mm
-Width at 14th Fret 54mm
-Thickness at 1st 21.5mm
-Thickness at 7th 23.5mm
-Radius 250mmR

Body Dimensions

-Length 20"
-Width 15 3/4"
-Max Depth 5"

For support or warranty questions, please contact the manufacturer:
Phone: 800-669-8262
Web: https://www.ibanez.com/usa/support/

Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 0.5 out of 5 stars. (1 ratings)
Submitted September 14, 2014 by Richard M in Fort Mohave, AZ

"Where do I start?"

Overall: 0.5 out of 5 stars
(see rating details)
Verified Customer zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
To start off, before anyone gets their feelings hurt, I am an Ibanez guitar lover, and have over 20 of them. As delivered from Zzounds, the guitar was a complete disaster. The best part of what was delivered, was the guitar case which is a semi-hard case consisting of nylon fabric cover (like a gig bag) with molded and covered, hard foam interior sections. The fret job is the worst I have ever seen on a new guitar; the frets are clipped, with no dress at all. After tuning the guitar and taking that first strum, I wanted to throw up, as it sounded like a badly made shoebox guitar. Next, I went through the frets, which were pitted, and discovered that two of them were loose and high which caused the high e and B to go dead from the seventh to ninth frets. Because I have over 120 guitars in my collection, I have to work on a lot of my own guitars, and posses the tools and ability to do most work including fret, bridge, neck replacement, Etc. Etc., pressing the two frets down and redressing them is no big deal, other than time. I have found the best way to check for high frets (not seated properly) is to use a short metal rod, 1/2" to 3/4" Dia., and about 3" long. You want the rod to sit on 3 to 4 frets at a time. By holding down the rod hard on the frets, and then pressing on one side and another (rocking), and moving it from fret set to fret set, you will be able to discern a slight rocking when a fret is high. So, bad frets found, pressed (and glued, as they would not stop going read more dead) and dressed back into place. Fret edges block filed at the proper angle, filed, sanded, and crowned. Oh, by the way, the fret radius is 9.5 inches. When removing the strings, the nut popped off, and one of the bridge pins broke off, so replaced all the pins, and put a little white glue on the nut and cleaned up the grooves, as they were full of plastic filings from machining. Replaced the 11-52 strings with new Martin 11-52's, and will probably try a set Of 12's down the road. Tightened the tuning pegs down, as they were flopping around, and treated the fretboard. The guitar sounds OK now, but the frets edges will need more work (normal), as I continue to play the guitar. I must admit, that I bought two guitars the same week, and the other was a flawless Epiphone EJ-200CE with NO PROBLEMS! Up front, this did spoil me a bit. To get this guitar right, you would have dumped $200.00-$400.00 at your local guitar shop for a $165.00 guitar. Methinks this makes no sense.......................

Musical Background:
Professional drummer. Hobby guitar, bass, Keyboards

Musical Style:
Rock, Blues, Jazz
read less
1 of 1 people (100%) people found this review helpful. Did you?
Thanks for your opinion!

No longer available at zZounds

In most cases, a product is unavailable because it has been discontinued by the manufacturer