USA
Catalog   /   Sound & Hi-Fi   /   Musical Instruments   /   Guitars & Equipment   /   Electric & Bass Guitars

Comparison Harley Benton RG-Junior LH vs Harley Benton RG-Junior

Add to comparison
Harley Benton RG-Junior LH
Harley Benton RG-Junior
Harley Benton RG-Junior LHHarley Benton RG-Junior
Expecting restockExpecting restock
TOP sellers
Typeelectric guitarelectric guitar
Number of strings66
Left handed
Pickupspassivepassive
Pickup diagramH-HH-H
Tone block
Typepassivepassive
Volume controls11
Tone controls11
Pickup switch3 position3 position
Body
Typemonolithmonolith
Size3/43/4
ShapeSuperstratSuperstrat
Cutawaydoubledouble
Materialpoplarpoplar
BridgeHardtail (fixed)Hardtail (fixed)
Neck
Mount typeboltedbolted
Number of frets2222
Nut width42 mm42 mm
Fretboard radius13.77 "13.77 "
Anchordoubledouble
Scale22.2 "22.2 "
Pegsclosedclosed
Neck materialmaplemaple
Fretboardroseacerroseacer
Added to E-Catalogseptember 2021september 2021

Left handed

Instruments originally intended for left-handers — more precisely, for musicians who play with a reverse, “left-handed” grip, when the right hand clamps the frets, and the left produces sound.

Electric guitars usually have an asymmetric arrangement of control elements (tone block controls, tremolo lever, etc.), and often also an asymmetric body shape. Accordingly, for comfortable playing with a reverse grip, it is not enough to rearrange the strings in reverse order and turn the instrument with the fingerboard to the right — a non-standard body arrangement can make using the instrument at least inconvenient, if not impossible. Thus, many manufacturers produce specialized left-handed models; such instruments have a “mirror” layout and allow you to fully play with a left-handed grip.
Harley Benton RG-Junior often compared