Ashthorpe Full-Size Cutaway Thinline Acoustic-Electric Guitar Package - Premium Tonewoods - Sunburst

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars | 4,278 ratings

Price: 99.99

Last update: 01-03-2025


About this item

Incredible sound: Perfect for musicians-in-the-making or advanced players, this guitar features an impressive tone, standout projection and incredible sonics. It's waiting to be heard.
Fine hardwood construction: Guitar is made from X-braced, A-grade Spruce wood, known for its resiliency and versatility and Basswood for warmth. Whether playing soft or loud, strumming or flatpicking, the guitar remains responsive and retains its tonal integrity.
Thinline cutaway design: The body of this full-size (41") guitar is cut away at the neck for better access and more comfortable playing of the top frets. It's also thinline (3" thick) which creates an unparalleled sound & aesthetic, and is lightweight for burdenless travel and playing.
Loaded with upgrades: On-board 4-band pickup/EQ (bass, mid-range, treble, and presence), two sets of upgraded phosphor bronze strings, and an ultra-glossy, tough-as-nails finish with chrome tuning pegs.
Complete kit: Bundle includes the Ashthorpe guitar, a soft nylon "gig bag" guitar case, thin, medium & heavy celluloid picks, on-board 4-band pickup EQ, guitar cable, a shoulder strap, an extra set of strings and an owner's manual.

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Ashthorpe Full-Size Cutaway Thinline Acoustic-Electric Guitar Package - Premium Tonewoods - Sunburst

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Will
    5.0 out of 5 stars Lots to love for an affordable price!
    Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2021
    I wanted to share my experience with the Ashthorpe C-85. Is this a perfect guitar, no. However, there is a lot to like about this item.

    First and foremost, this guitar is intended for a beginner to intermediate player on a budget looking for a thinline, parlor, or concertina style body. This particular model offers a 3" body with a 20 fret neck, similar in length to a dreadnaught.

    The sound is great. It is bright and rich with full treble and midtones. The low end is a bit tempered but as good as any parlor and concertina body I have played. Honestly, the sound is the best feature of this guitar, I was blown away.

    The guitar I recieved had 2/64 neck relief out of the box. The plastic nut was perfect. When playing strings on the first and second fret it was in perfect pitch when matched against a Snark Super Tight tuner.

    The plastic saddle is slightly high for my taste, but to be expected on a guitar out of the box. Good manufacturers err to the high side and this one is as it should be from a good manufacturer. During my setup I only needed to take 3/64 off the saddle to get 4/64 string height at the low E and 5/64 string height at the high E when measured at the 12th fret. I play with low action so this isn't a necessity, only my taste. The guitar is definitely comfortable and playable out of the box.

    The electronics function as expected and actually sound nice. I wasn't expecting much, but I was pleasantly surprised at the analog sound reproduction offered in this unknown kit.

    The not so good: the tuners are sealed, unlocking, hollow shaft. That said, the function as they should and hold tune fairly well.

    The ink/dye on the fret board bled over to the binding surrounding it (pictured). I was able to remove with some 600 wet/dry paper, which leads me to believe it is rosewood only in color, not in material, but again, this guitar plays and sounds great, so take it for what it is, not for what it isn't.

    There was some fret sprout and one of the frets (11th) was noticably shorter than the others. I hit the edges with a drywall sanding sponge and smoothed out all the edges and it's hardly noticable now (pictured). This also served to remove any tooling marks left from manufacturing. Otherwise, the frets topside aren't very gritty and play well. A 30 minute play in and they good to go.

    The finish on the body looks like the images in the listing and it's pretty good. The one area of notice was the finish on the back of the neck where there was a bit of orange peel in the clear finish (pictured). No big deal, but it was there until I rubbed it out with some 1200 wet/dry paper and polished back up with some compound.

    Summary: I dressed the neck with a cheap inlay kit adding some flair and character to an otherwise unremarkable looking budget piece. Now it unmistakably mine and I'm very happy, even just looking at it. It plays fantastic and sounds amazing for this price point.

    Overall, I'm very satisfied with the value this guitar offers and would recommend to anybody, as long as you know that you are getting some unusual material choices (I would identify them, but I have no idea). That said, they work well together, whatever they are.

    I'm not a brand snob or a purist, otherwise I wouldn't have taken a chance on this. I just know value and sound, and this guitar checks both those boxes, punching well above its weight class. I would give it a fair sound comparison to intermediate Ibanez, Yamaha, Alvarez, or Breedlove acoustic sound quality (maybe others, but I'm familiar with these Asian mainline manufacturers).

    To look at it, one might underestimate the potential this guitar offers, but don't. If your only looking to spend $120 on an acoustic/electric, choose this guitar. Don't even think about it, do it!
    Customer image
    Will
    5.0 out of 5 stars Lots to love for an affordable price!
    Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2021
    I wanted to share my experience with the Ashthorpe C-85. Is this a perfect guitar, no. However, there is a lot to like about this item.

    First and foremost, this guitar is intended for a beginner to intermediate player on a budget looking for a thinline, parlor, or concertina style body. This particular model offers a 3" body with a 20 fret neck, similar in length to a dreadnaught.

    The sound is great. It is bright and rich with full treble and midtones. The low end is a bit tempered but as good as any parlor and concertina body I have played. Honestly, the sound is the best feature of this guitar, I was blown away.

    The guitar I recieved had 2/64 neck relief out of the box. The plastic nut was perfect. When playing strings on the first and second fret it was in perfect pitch when matched against a Snark Super Tight tuner.

    The plastic saddle is slightly high for my taste, but to be expected on a guitar out of the box. Good manufacturers err to the high side and this one is as it should be from a good manufacturer. During my setup I only needed to take 3/64 off the saddle to get 4/64 string height at the low E and 5/64 string height at the high E when measured at the 12th fret. I play with low action so this isn't a necessity, only my taste. The guitar is definitely comfortable and playable out of the box.

    The electronics function as expected and actually sound nice. I wasn't expecting much, but I was pleasantly surprised at the analog sound reproduction offered in this unknown kit.

    The not so good: the tuners are sealed, unlocking, hollow shaft. That said, the function as they should and hold tune fairly well.

    The ink/dye on the fret board bled over to the binding surrounding it (pictured). I was able to remove with some 600 wet/dry paper, which leads me to believe it is rosewood only in color, not in material, but again, this guitar plays and sounds great, so take it for what it is, not for what it isn't.

    There was some fret sprout and one of the frets (11th) was noticably shorter than the others. I hit the edges with a drywall sanding sponge and smoothed out all the edges and it's hardly noticable now (pictured). This also served to remove any tooling marks left from manufacturing. Otherwise, the frets topside aren't very gritty and play well. A 30 minute play in and they good to go.

    The finish on the body looks like the images in the listing and it's pretty good. The one area of notice was the finish on the back of the neck where there was a bit of orange peel in the clear finish (pictured). No big deal, but it was there until I rubbed it out with some 1200 wet/dry paper and polished back up with some compound.

    Summary: I dressed the neck with a cheap inlay kit adding some flair and character to an otherwise unremarkable looking budget piece. Now it unmistakably mine and I'm very happy, even just looking at it. It plays fantastic and sounds amazing for this price point.

    Overall, I'm very satisfied with the value this guitar offers and would recommend to anybody, as long as you know that you are getting some unusual material choices (I would identify them, but I have no idea). That said, they work well together, whatever they are.

    I'm not a brand snob or a purist, otherwise I wouldn't have taken a chance on this. I just know value and sound, and this guitar checks both those boxes, punching well above its weight class. I would give it a fair sound comparison to intermediate Ibanez, Yamaha, Alvarez, or Breedlove acoustic sound quality (maybe others, but I'm familiar with these Asian mainline manufacturers).

    To look at it, one might underestimate the potential this guitar offers, but don't. If your only looking to spend $120 on an acoustic/electric, choose this guitar. Don't even think about it, do it!
    Images in this review
    Customer image Customer image Customer image Customer image Customer image Customer image
  • PedalAddict.
    5.0 out of 5 stars Nice warm tone for a thin body. worth the price!
    Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2024
    Pro tip: new or freshly changed strings always need to be stretched out by hand before they will hold tuning, especially lighter strings like these made with softer alloys. I personally haven't noticed tuners drifting but I have noticed the string winding job from the factory isn't that great and that can also cause slipping.

    just wanted a cheapo for around the house so I don't have to fire up the electric rig every time.

    Nicely surprised with this one, usually my concern with cheaper acoustics is they are paper thin and sound hollow, tinny and flat.

    The body is pretty solid and feels stiff and looking inside very well braced, for being a thin body it has a much warmer and louder sound then I expected, and because of the nice solid construction you can hear a bit of natural reverb when you ring out a note.

    Action is tight and low out of the box and the light strings are perfect for fingerwork. Fret ends are average and I haven't found any buzzing. It may be cheap but looks like it was built well. Basic preamp but it works fine for plugging in and sounds ok. I bet this guy would sound great with a soundhole humbucker.

    The bag is better then most cheap bags. While it won't protect from a hard fall it will do the job of keeping knicks, dings and scratches in the backseat of a car to a minimum.

    Nothing fancy but does the job nicely and has a pleasant tone. As with most budget instruments minor cosmetic flaws don't bother me and I don't see very many anyways. so I usually don't ding them for it. Seen a lot worse at 2-4x money. So a home run for my use.
  • Ray P. Lucero
    4.0 out of 5 stars Great for the price but does have issues
    Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2022
    This is a decent little guitar to bang on. I am a pro player and use Taylor and Fender Acoustics for live Worship. I thought why not try something on the cheaper end. See what its all about. 100 bucks is not a bad price so why not. It does sound pretty decent. Amazed how well the EQ works. Its reactive and does curve the sound nicely. It is light as expected. Lots of plastic but its 100 bucks. Love the brown color. Frets are OK. A little thin as you play up the fret board. Action needs work but was playable out of the box. Was worried about the warning that tuning could break the neck. Pretty funny, but she tuned right up. Love the shape of the head stock. A lot like Martin. It even came with a battery for the pickup. Shipped fast. This is all the good.

    The bad (as expected), the strings and tuners suck. I will replace the tuners and strings and see how she holds up. But again for the price and a little fixing i think i will gig this guitar. Actually was surprised at the low end of this guitar for being a thin line. It's got decent rich resonance. Overall recommended for beginners. you can learn guitar for sure on this dude without breaking the bank. Well see how she holds up to the rigors of a gig. Thanks and good luck.
  • Triumph
    5.0 out of 5 stars Recording Quality? Budget Friendly Acoustic Guitar
    Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2024
    Searching for a unique acoustic sound we purchased this Ashthorpe guitar after reading some reviews. It needed some adjustment when it first arrived so sanded the bridge saddle a bit to lower the action and adjusted the truss rod. It plays nice and sounds quite good, plugged in it sound even better. So good that we actually used it to record a song called 'Daemons In The Digital' by GTO. If you search for the song you can hear this guitar yourself. Recording quality? You be the judge.
    Customer image
    Triumph
    5.0 out of 5 stars Recording Quality? Budget Friendly Acoustic Guitar
    Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2024
    Searching for a unique acoustic sound we purchased this Ashthorpe guitar after reading some reviews. It needed some adjustment when it first arrived so sanded the bridge saddle a bit to lower the action and adjusted the truss rod. It plays nice and sounds quite good, plugged in it sound even better. So good that we actually used it to record a song called 'Daemons In The Digital' by GTO. If you search for the song you can hear this guitar yourself. Recording quality? You be the judge.
    Images in this review
    Customer image

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