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Asmuse Foldable Travel Headless Electric Guitar with Built In Headphone Jack Full-Scale Overhead Guitar ALP AD-80 Ultra-Light Portable and Rechargeable with USB Cable and Gig Bag

  • Based on 127 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: 19 left in stock
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Friday, May 24
Order within 15 hours and 12 minutes
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Size: E-guitar


Features

  • Headless design---headless with locking nut, to protect the guitar strings, so Its not easy to slip out of tune.
  • Foldable body---The folding size is much smaller than the regular electric guitar, its portable and convenient for travel or performance. When you unfold it, It becomes a full-scale electric guitar! You can enjoy playing!
  • Silent Design---Built-in headphone amplifier and rechargeable battery which can work for 8 hours. You can play on the train or in the hotel, or anywhere you dont want to disturb other people.
  • Special Modular Bridge---Its easier for upgrading and replacement. It matches most electric guitar strings in the market, you dont need to take time to buy customized strings.
  • CNC Processing---The Aluminum body looks so cool and most important, its more durable.

Brand: Asmuse


Color: Black


Top Material Type: Aluminum


Body Material: Aluminum Alloy


Back Material Type: Aluminum Alloy


Neck Material Type: Maple Wood


Fretboard Material Type: Rosewood


Guitar Pickup Configuration: Combination


String Material Type: Nickel


Hand Orientation: Right


Item Weight: 10.93 pounds


Product Dimensions: 34 x 9 x 5.11 inches


Date First Available: April 16, 2019


Back Material: Aluminum Alloy


Body Material: Aluminum Alloy


Color Name: Black


Fretboard Material: Rosewood


Guitar Pickup Configuration: Combination


String Material: Nickel


Top Material: Aluminum


Neck Material Type: Maple Wood


Number of Strings: 6


Guitar Bridge System: Fixed


Size: E-guitar


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, May 24

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • First guitar was unacceptable - Replacement guitar is better.
Size: Headless-Black
Updated Review 5/26/2023 The replacement guitar arrived and this one is a bit better than the first one. This one was actually playable out of the box. It also had a QC sticker on the back of the neck. I just tuned it up and played it. Everything functioned as it should. The first few frets are still short and the treble e string was sitting close to the fret end, but not as bad as the first guitar. I did a neck set on this guitar as well and it fixed that issue for now. The string hasn't popped off since. I'll probably pop the nut loose and move it to the bass side 1/2 a mm or so at some point. Since I decided to keep this guitar, let's jump into a few things that might be important to some folks. Pickups (ceramic magnets) are very nice on this guitar. I frankly didn't expect them to be any good, but they are, IMO, very good. Probably the best pickups I've ever had in a budget guitar. They have clean bell chime and take moderate gain pretty good. The bridge humbucker comes with a red coil tap (NOT coil split) wire tucked under the heat shrink on the wiring lead. I replaced the factory tone pot with a push pull pot to make use of that and it is very useable. Here is what the DCR measurements look like. Bridge humbucker 9.68k, Bridge humbucker tapped 5.4k, Middle 4.76k, Neck 4.56k. These are well matched and are definitely staying in the guitar. This guitar has the licensed by KD bridge on it with the little magnetic crank. To me it's a novelty. It works ok, but it's quirky. The crank hits the other tuners when I try to use it. It's also coarse so you find yourself chasing each note sharp and flat back and forth a few times. The good news is that once it's in tune, it holds tuning very well and you can make minor adjustments with your fingers so you really don't have to use the crank after the string change. Personally I prefer the inline bridge system that my Leo Jaymz uses over this one. It's the type that Ibanez uses on their Q52 headless. I find that one better all around and just as stable. Bridge adjustment. This is a little different, but not hard. There are 2 small grub screws in each saddle. Loosen both of these before you make any adjustments. Take the tension off of the strings. Looking from the end toward the neck on my guitar the left screw is the lock and the right screw is the adjustment. If you lower a roller, it will move down and toward the neck. If you raise a roller it will move up and toward the output jack. Some of mine were sticky so I used the small hex wrench to help position them. This process will screw up your intonation so set the saddle height before you set your intonation. Once you have the height you want to gently snug down the lock screw. These strip easily so be careful. Remember that these screws will not be even like the screws on a Fender strat saddle. They don't work the same way. To set the intonation loosen the string and underneath it you will find another hex screw. Loosen that and you can slide the saddle back and forth to set your intonation. It's a typical stair step pattern. You can see it in the picture that I uploaded. That's pretty much it. Just do the setup to your specs, install your favorite strings and adjust the pickup heights where you want them. On my guitar I had to polish the frets since they were very gritty. Fret ends were fine and didn't need any attention. Oiled the fingerboard. Replaced the 2 black knobs with 2 pearl insert knobs from the parts bin that matched the dot inlays. I already mentioned wiring in the push pull pot. Set it up to my specs with my strings and that's it. Finally, I don't recommend this guitar for beginners or folks that do not do their own setup ups/adjustments. Having to pay someone to do that can easily exceed $100 and this is no longer a value at that point. Hope this helps someone. ----- Original Review For some reason Asmuse listed this exact guitar again when they already had a listing for this. Not sure why they did that, but here is my review of the original listing. This review is for the black double cut version that I received. I have a Leo Jaymz headless guitar with 2 humbuckers and wanted to add a headless guitar with single coils. This was the only one that I found that comes in a HSS configuration. This guitar arrived quickly and was well packed. Unfortunately, it's going right back. Every guitar should be playable out of the box regardless of whether or not they are budget or premium brands. This was a fail and don't accept anything less from this company. No more excuses and no more free passes. That time has come and gone. Here are the issues with this particular guitar. The white wire that connects to the jack was loose in the control cavity and needed to be soldered on. There was no output to the amp. There was a long exposed piece of ground wire that was also sticking out in the cavity and needed to be trimmed back. The first 4 frets are too short and that caused the treble e string to pop off of the fret ends. I tired to do a neck set, but it was not enough to help. For some reason they routed out the jack and switch locations AFTER they painted the guitar. Why they did that is beyond me. That leaves two bare wood spots in the control cavity. No big deal since no one can see it, but still it's something to note. There is a minor scratch on the back of the guitar. It could be easily buffed out, but I'm not going to fool with it. Because of the above, I cannot recommend this guitar to anyone. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2023 by SNAFU SNAFU

  • Great Travel Guitar - Stated 40mm nut is misleading
Build Quality, Fretwork and Finish – Well above the price point. In some ways it’s better than expected at its original $400 price. The neck is one-piece maple with a smooth satin finish and a rosewood fretboard. The rosewood looks tighter grained than usual, and possible dyed, but acceptable. The fretwork among the best I’ve seen at almost any price point. No rough ends or fret sprout. Fret rocker revealed no high spots. Alignment of the neck, pickups and bridge were all good and the guitar came with good action (maybe lower than usual) and intonation was very close as well. The finish is just okay, but typical of the price. You can see a little orange peel under the right lighting and there were a few small scuffs and scratches that are invisible from a few feet away. There’s a bit of a flame look that’s probably just photo printed, not a veneer. Hardware and Electronics – The Leaf uses a “Licensed by KD” bridge that is also used on some other headless guitars. It allows for individual height and intonation adjustments for each string. Tuning is also done at the bridge via six knurled knobs (the ball end of the string is at the head of the neck) that wrap the string on a roller. It works quite well, but it’s not easy to turn the knobs by hand once the strings get tight. To make it easier, there is a small crank included that is magnetically held in a recess on the side of the bridge. At the head of the neck, strings go through a locking nut that provides the break angle and the nut itself is metal. The head has a slide out tray meant to be used as a pick holder. The best thing about that tray is that when you take it out, you can easily attach a clip-on tuner, something that’s near impossible otherwise. The guitar also comes with strap locks, but I’ll be replacing the strap buttons with my usual Dunlop Dual Design ones that I use on every guitar. The control cavity has the usual mini pots, but they seem to be smooth in action. The 3-way blade switch also seems pretty solid. On mine, they wired the tone pot backwards, so you turn it counter clockwise to minimize its effect. It’s easily fixed and I‘ll probably upgrade the pots and (maybe) the pickups anyway. I was surprised to see, as advertised, they use a Pure Tone multi-contact output jack. Usually, these cheap Chinese guitars don’t even use something at the level of a Switchcraft jack, much less something that costs more. Plugging into to this guitar is a very solid connection. The pickups are advertised as ‘59/60 PAF Alnico (probably 5) and as stated in the review I linked previously, they sound pretty good. I A/B’d them with my PRS Paul’s Guitar and found they’re a bit brighter and maybe slightly harsher, but only when the tone control is all the way up. Everything Else and Conclusion – The LEAF-200 comes with a decent gig bag. It’s got firm padding that would help prevent dings and a front pocket to carry the truss rod wrench and allen wrenches (for the bridge) that comes with the guitar. It also comes with a cheap guitar cable. Overall, this is pretty nice guitar to play. The ¾ sized body is just big and heavy enough to give a normal guitar feel. It’s also pretty well balanced, with no neck dive. The neck feels good in your hand and pickups sound restrained, not hot. The split coil function works well and the drop off in volume is not as great as some guitars in split coil mode. Unlike many headless guitars, based on the pickups, this is not aimed at a metal guitarist. The jury is still out on the bridge. Seems simple enough to restring, but not if you were in a hurry. Also, on-the-fly tuning is not easy with use of the little crank that comes with it. That being said, it holds tune pretty well and this is not a guitar you would gig with anyway. I think that as a travel guitar, it’s a keeper. Measured Specifications – Length – 32” Weight – 5.6 lbs. Nut Width – 42.5 mm (see below) Neck Depth at 1st fret - 0.86 Neck Depth at 12th fret - 0.91 Scale – 25.5” Fretboard Radius – 350mm (13.78”) NOTE: The nut actually sits in a recess that wider than it. So, if you measure the nut alone, it's 40mm. The practical width (and associated string spacing) is consistent with the 42.5mm posted above (see photos). ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2023 by MikeR MikeR

  • Worth Every Penny
Size: Headless-Black
This thing resonated beautifully out of the box. You know how some guitars can feel dead and lifeless, this wasn't one of them. The bridge was adjusted very well, if a little high, but totally playable out of the box. The small size means I can practice sitting back on the couch or in my car while I wait for the kid's dance class to finish. Pickup position 4 (middle and neck) cancels hum beautifully and quacks nicely as you'd expect. The Humbucker is decent, but not as quiet as you'd expect. Totally usable and even enjoyable as a practice instrument. For the price, it's an absolute gem. For those concerned about the little magnetic tool stuck to the bridge, it seems like it's almost just a speed wrench, for string changes. Try turning the tuner knob just using a pick, I added a picture with a tuner clamped to the tone knob to show how I tune up. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2023 by Todd Todd

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