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Dean Playmate Mini Acoustic Guitar, 1/2-Size
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Dean Playmate Mini Acoustic Guitar, 1/2-Size

List Price: $59.00
Our Price: $47.49
You Save: $11.51 (20%)
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Description:

Dean Playmate Mini Acoustic Guitar--Half Size, Full Sound

The Dean Playmate JT-J is an incredible acoustic guitar for a beginner, child, or traveler. This half-sized sized guitar features traditional construction with a set mahogany neck, rosewood fingerboard and chrome hardware. As small as this guitar is, it's no slouch when it comes to sound or construction. Take it on the road or play it at home, the Playmate JT-J acoustic guitar won't let you down.


Looks as good as it sounds.

Solid Body and Features
Featuring a hardwood laminated linden body and a solid spruce top for a superior blend of rich tones, this guitar also has a mahogany neck with a rosewood fretboard—complete with 18 frets even at the 25.5-inch scale. The Dean Playmate JT-J acoustic guitar also comes with pearl dot inlays, sealed tuners and celluloid bindings. This is a six-string guitar that uses steel strings. This specific Playmate JT-J acoustic guitar comes in satin natural.


Excellent for beginners and for travel.

Quality Materials
The guitar top is the part of the instrument that most affects the sound. It is also the most delicate part of any high quality acoustic guitar. The grade and thickness of the wood used, as well as the bracing structure, have a huge impact on the instruments sound. The idea of applying an arch or curve to the top is appealing because the added strength of an arched top should allow for the use of a thinner and more lightly braced top. This is why Dean Guitars takes the care it does when making every guitar in its line.

Ideal for Travel
The Playmate JT-J acoustic guitar is ideal for travel, whether just next-door for a barbeque, down the street to a local function, or across the country. With the right case (sold separately), there isn't anywhere you can't go. The JT-J acoustic guitar is small enough to fit into overhead bins or next to you on the tour bus.

What Kind of Guitar Does Your Child Need?
Starting with an acoustic guitar is the best way to go. It is less expensive and it starts them out on the traditional way to play guitar. An acoustic guitar like the Dean Playmate JT-J is a good starting point because of its small size and solid dependability.

Features:

  • Linden Body
  • 18 3/4" scale
  • Maple neck
  • Covered Tuners
  • Celluliod Binding
  • Mosaic Rosette
  • Designed for very young children to learn the basic guitar skills.
  • Gloss Natural

Features:

1/2 Size Student Steel String Acoustic


Chrome Hardware, Set Neck


Signature Dean Bridge


Chrome Tuners


Product Details:
Product Weight: 3.3 pounds
Package Length: 44.5 inches
Package Width: 19.5 inches
Package Height: 4.0 inches
Package Weight: 5.8 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 22 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 3.5 ( 22 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


Most Helpful Customer Reviews

144 of 155 found the following review helpful:

3Mixed FeelingsSep 24, 2004
By Hopefully Tomorrow
We all know Dean Makes great guitars, yet this one, does NOT have a trust rod. If the neck is bent or over time moves from the pressure of the strings the guitar is garbage. This guitar will NOT last you very long, certainly not a novice. You are better off paying extra (like 70-100) to buy a guitar with a trust rod. This will enable you to bring the guitar to a repair man. He can fix the neck of the guitar so it is playable. Guitars without trust rods are harder to tune and do not stay in tune. Dean makes a great guitar, but you get what you pay for. Hope this helped.

52 of 53 found the following review helpful:

3Just a bit more than a toy.Feb 21, 2005
By Rene
The main points for me in deciding to buy this little guitar were the cheap price and the affiliation with Dean Guitars. As a long-time guitar player, it can be a lot of fun to play a little guitar in places a full-size guitar won't work, like in the car. I believe an experienced player will get more out of this than a beginner. Although the quality of this guitar is higher than a toy guitar you find at retail toy stores, it still leaves much to be desired in terms of easy playability. Even with a zero fret, the action on this guitar was way too high. The result was that it was hard to play and hard to tune because the intonation was off. These are the least desireable things for a good beginners guitar. What I did was to file down the grooves in the bridge to lower the action. I also put new strings on the guitar--light gauge because the guitar sounds best tuned to A, in otherwise standard tuning. With these changes, it's become a fun guitar to play. For under $30, I wasn't disappointed by the plastic fretboard, painted-on binding or cheap tuners. The finish is nice and the bridge is distinctive. So, I'd say it's a good toy for an experienced guitarist but a bad guitar for a beginner.

47 of 52 found the following review helpful:

5For the Price You Can't Beat This GuitarNov 11, 2004
By Mark D Burgh "Music, Writing, Art, Film, History Freak"
I bought this Dean JTJ for a few reasons: price, size (my hands are small), and the sound. The Dean JTJ gives me a lot of pleasure to play and I'm always glad I bought it. It's not a deluxe Gibson, Martin, or Taylor guitar, so you may not feel that the JTJ is on par with those pricey, well-regarded instruments, but for me, an amateur looking for a practice guitar that wouldn't break my budget, or be so bad that it would fall apart quickly, I can't falt the JTJ. Now, I realize that there is no truss rod, but I've never had any tuning problems, and I play the JTJ nearly every day. And you know what, if the JTJ breaks, I'll get another one, but I think that the quality of this Dean guitar is better than that. In fact, I bought it in the hopes of passing it on to my daughter when she gets ready to learn guitar.

20 of 21 found the following review helpful:

1Dean should be ashamed. They knew better and sold garbage anyway.Jun 19, 2008
By D. Reinstein "marindavid"
Having been a picker and strummer of six and twelve stringed guitars for nearly 45 years, I found myself offended by the unadvertised aspects of this 'name brand' child's guitar. Nowhere in the advertising does it mention that it simply cannot be tuned to standard concert tuning (a reality quickly admitted by Dean staff when asked,) rendering it useless as a teaching instrument. It must be tuned at least one full note higher and regular concert tuning end even at that, the frets are not accurately enough placed to get consistent sounds (either single notes or chords) from it.
I expected that for under $40., I would have to tune and re-tune it. What I had no cause to expect was that it was physically impossible to tune it correctly in the first place. According to Dean's "Armadillo Customer Service Manager," Brad Mader who responded to some comments he saw about this and sent me a personal email, "Unfortunately due to the size of the guitar & price point, the guitar has to be tuned that way.If you need an acoustic for standard tuning, I would suggest a full size acoustic, something from our Exotic line will work Just fine."
I didn't expect a quality instrument for this little - I am not a fool - But from a company with the reputation and product line of Dean Guitars, I did expect a tunable and playable beginning guitar. The JTJ is simply neither.
As other reviewers have suggested, spend $100. or so and get a reasonable sound and better designed and built guitar. Nothing is more discouraging to any beginning player of any age than an instrument that is simply not designed or built to sound right in the first place.

13 of 13 found the following review helpful:

4you get what you pay for - change the stringsFeb 11, 2005
By Anon
For $25 you can't expect much, but this is a good guitar considering the price. It was packed very well, but the strings that came with it were awful - they are difficult (if not impossible) to tune correctly, and they were very corroded when I received it.

The solution was very simple - I bought a new set of strings for a regular guitar. Instead of tuning it like a standard guitar, tune it a fourth or a major third above standard tuning. This is perfect for the size of the guitar, and it sounds great. Remember to use very low gauge strings.

See all 22 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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