Epiphone Wildkat Electric Guitar with Bigsby Tremolo

A true Epiphone original, the Wildkat is a small semi-hollowbody with a sweet flame maple top -- and a Bigsby vibrato, for when you really want to get wild.

$499.00

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Epiphone Limited Edition Wildkat Koa Electric Guitar

No longer available at zZounds
This Wildkat's koa top and semi-hollow mahogany body provide warm resonance, while its dogear P-90 pickups can bite when you need them to.

What's special about this item?

Feature: What it does:
Solid koa top Sparkling, balanced tone that ages well
Mahogany back and neck Warm, focused and present midrange
Rosewood fretboard Open, warm tone and smooth playing feel
Alnico P-90T and P-90R dog-ear pickups High-output single-coils; biting treble response

The Epiphone Limited Edition Wildkat Koa's innovative design has a similar profile to renowned Epiphone archtops but is made smaller for easier travel. The Wildkat Koa features a solid koa top and a mahogany body in a beautiful Natural finish that's computer-routed to create a perfectly tuned acoustic guitar-like body but with a "center block" just like the Sheraton II PRO and ES-335. The combination gives the Wildkat Koa that round "archtop" tone but with the incredible sustain of a solid body guitar.

The hand-fitted, glued-in solid Mahogany neck has dot inlays, a 24.75" scale, and a 1960s style SlimTaperTM profile that's easy on the hands for long hours of performing and rehearsing. The classic Rosewood fingerboard has a 12" radius and a standard 1.68" nut. The Wildkat's headstock features Epiphone's early 60's "bullet" badge, seen on rare models from the early 60s including the very first Casino in 1961. And it also comes with world famous Grover Rotomatic machine heads with an 18:1 ratio for fast and accurate tuning.

- Top Material: Figured Koa
- Body Material: Mahogany (computer-routed)
- Neck Material: Mahogany
- Neck Shape: "1960's" SlimTaper; D-Profile
- Neck Joint: Glued-In, Set Neck
- Scale Length: 24.75"
- Fingerboard Material: Rosewood with pearloid "Dot" inlays
- Fingerboard Radius: 12"
- Truss Rod: Yes; Adjustable
- Truss Rod Cover: 2-Layer (Black/White) with "E"
- Frets: 22; Medium-Jumbo
- Headstock: Sloped Dovewing with vintage "Epiphone" metal badge
- Binding:
- Body (top) = 1-Layer; Pure White
- Fingerboard = 1-Layer; Pure White
- F Holes = 1-Layer; Pure White
- Headstock = None
- Nut Width: 1.68"
- Hardware: Gold
- Machine Heads: Grover Rotomatic; 18:1 ratio
- Neck Pickup: Epiphone P-90R Dogear Classic
- Bridge Pickup: Epiphone P-90T Dogear Classic
- Controls:
- Master Volume
- Volume
- 1 - Tone
- Pickup Selector: 3-way Epiphone toggle
- Bridge: Epiphone LockTone Tune-o-matic
- Tailpiece: Stopbar
- Knobs: Black "Top Hat" knobs with gold metal inserts
- Strings: D'Addario 10-46
- Optional Hard Case: (940-EHLCS)

For support or warranty questions, please contact the manufacturer:
Phone: 800-4GIBSON
Web: https://www.epiphone.com/en-US/Support/Contact

Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars. (2 ratings)
Submitted July 19, 2017 by Paul Cutrona in Martinsburg, WV

"brilliant"

Overall: 4.5 out of 5 stars
(see rating details)
Verified Customer zZounds has verified that this reviewer made a purchase from us.
I've seen a lot of reviews of this on different sites, and of bigsby guitars in general. This particular guitar plays incredibly well, and the bigsby stays in tune no matter how I wail on it. But let me say this - you actually have to know how to set up a guitar first. When i got it, the first thing I did was a slight fret-level, truss adjustment, and polishing of the frets. I always do that. Next, I restrung with better strings. Hybrid-slinky .009's to be exact. Then, I put a tiny bit of lithium grease on the nut - I've been using for years; you get it at lowes and it's called garage-door grease. Then I stretch the strings out a few times. Now, it does everything it should - low action, all the way up the frets, and whammy antics do not put it out of tune. You may not be able to do all that stuff yourself, and indeed I woudlnt erecommend it if you arent experiences - get a pro setup somewhere. At that point, this guitar feels SOOO good, and plays and sounds phenomenally. However. for MY music, the pickups dont do what I want. I use loud high gain marshall. Dogear pickups tend to howl with that. For clasic rock or anything other, it's fine. But for me, I am ordering the tv-jones dogear-cover spacer (to retain the current look), and a pair of gold gfs pickups. But that's me. I would really recommend this guitar for about any playing style. If you think a semi-hollow cant gut high gain, my other main guitar is an epiphone sheraton-II, and I play in a weekend read more bar cover band doing stuff like priest, megadeth, kiss, and the like. I love semi hollow's, as once you get the feel, you can use controlled feedback really well. I have no doubt after this setup, this guitar will scream just perfectly. As for "Epiphone" - dont hate - they have become one of the most stable and consistent brands around, and I've played about everything in my 4 decades of playing. I love Epi now. And for the money, you just so cannot beat their guitars. They just need some initial love and attention in the setup department. After that, the compare against anything and about everything I've ever played. This guitar is a player AND a real looker. The koa wood looks amazing, the upper fret access is bettert than a les paul, and the bigsby rocks. Worth getting this guitar.

Musical Background:
Pro and semi-pro on and off since the late 70s.

Musical Style:
Rock, Classic, Southern, Metal, Pop, Funk, Country
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