Jackson Pro DK2 Ash Dinky Baked White
Online available Usually shipped the next day!
You can trust us!
We have been there for you locally for over 40 years and look back on over 20 years of experience in the mail order business.
Features
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Technology: Solid body
Clear, focused, powerful sound with higher sustain -
Neck construction: Screwed
A little less sustain, but very percussive. -
Fretboard: Ebony
Hard, clear sound quality and long durability. -
Scale length: 25" (635 - 659mm)
Classic scale length of ST-style guitars -
Body material: Ash (Ash)
Bright and assertive highs with good sustain length. -
Pickup: HH (2x humbuckers)
Full, warm sound with strong mids and highs and pronounced sustain. -
Fretboard radius: 12" - 16" compound
Better bending options, higher and more comfortable fret purity.
- Color / finish: Baked White
- Technology: Solid body
- Body shape: Modern ST
- Strings: 6-string
- Neck construction: Screwed
- Frets: 24
- Scale length: 25.5" (648mm)
- Body material: Ash (Ash)
- Neck: Maple, graphite-reinforced
- Fretboard: Ebony
- Fretboard radius: 12" - 16" compound
- Fretboard inlays: Pearloid Dot
- Pickup: HH (2x humbuckers)
- Neck pickup: Seymour Duncan SH - 1n
- Bridge pickup: Seymour Duncan TB - 4
- Pickup selector switch: 3-way switches
- Controls: 1x Volume, 1x Tone
- Bridge / tremolo: Floyd Rose 1000
- Hardware: Black
- Strings thickness ex factory: .009 - .042
- Country of origin: South Korea
Jackson Guitars was created when Grover Jackson took over the well-known company Charvel's Guitar Repair in 1978. The collaboration with the then Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Randy Rhoads in 1980 resulted in the Rhoads body shape, which is still available today, and also marked the start of Jackson Guitars. The timing was just right because heavy metal was experiencing a heyday in the 1980s and the trend (started by Eddie Van Halen) was so-called super or power strats. These are guitars that are visually more or less based on the classic ST form , but are equipped with more modern and stylistically more suitable components such as humbuckers or Floyd Rose tremolos. Jackson soon earned a reputation as a forger of premium, American-built, high-end custom instruments that could be seen in the hands of many well-known guitarists of the time. With the musical changes of the 1990s, Jackson Guitars began opening factories in the Far East in order to be able to offer their instruments in cheaper areas. Since 2002, both Jackson and Charvel have been part of the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation.