Gretsch guitars: G1617 Synchromatic Blue Sparkle Jet

Gretsch 
G1617 Synchromatic Blue Sparkle Jet

The mere existence Synchromatic line may be one of the more baffling Gretsch mysteries of recent years — maybe decades. The revered Synchromatic name, traditionally reserved for high-end acoustic archtops, was plastered across a dizzying array of Korean-made guitars which were themselves near-clones of the Electromatic line offered at the same time.

Like the Electromatics and Historics, the Gretsch Synchromatic line of guitars debuted in 1999. Nobody could keep track of all the models, not even Gretsch, and all three lines of budget guitars were merged into a single (and much-improved) Electromatic line-up in 2003.

The G161X Sparkle Jets were functionally pretty similar to the G13XX Junior Jets, bolt-on maple necks and all, and Gretsch offered those as the G1615 (Black Sparkle), G1616 (Silver Sparkle), G1617 (Blue Sparkle), G1618 (Gold Sparkle) and G1619 (Red Sparkle) from 1999-2003. In 2003, the G1615T was also offered, adding a Bigsby tremolo.

G162X Sparkle Jets were easily identifiable by their f-holes (the only Jet-bodied guitars to have them) and included the G1625 (Black Sparkle), G1626 (Silver Sparkle), G1627 (Blue Sparkle), G1628 (Gold Sparkle) and G1629 (Red Sparkle) from 1999-2003, as well as the Bigsby-equipped G1626T and G1629T for 2003.

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Comments

  1. Steve Yetter wrote:
    I have a G1627 (Blue Sparkle with F-hole and adjustable stud-mounted hardtail). The Korean Gretsch-buckers are like the ones on the current Electromatic line from Korea. It has the tone control setup with one toggle and a master volume, plus individual pu vol pots and a master tone pot. For $200 out the door (used - bought in May '07), it's a dandy lil' ol' guitar. Plays good, sounds good, the tuners are sealed, and the darkish Blue Sparkle and single cream bound top looks "Ginchey, Baby!" The pickups will howl at extreme gain levels, but they're dead quiet (well shielded). The pots are OK and the sweeps are decent and smooth soundwise. The stud mounted bridge offers a lot of high end freqs and the guitar sustains like a Les Paul, only it is MUCH lighter. The bolt-on maple neck can be made to flex if you get too rambunctious with it, and has the typical scarf joint near the headstock. No worries though. It's a generic Korean guitar, but with a Gretsch Jet shape and "G" knobs!

    May 15, 2007 11:11 p.m.

User Ratings:

Overall rating:
3 (out of 5), 1 rating
Playability rating:
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Collectibility rating:
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Basic Synchromatic Blue Sparkle Jet specs:

Body Material
Unknown
Scale
24¾"

1999:

Synchromatic G1617 Blue Sparkle Jet introduced.

Body Width
12¾"
Body Depth
1½"
Body Style
Single Cutaway Solidbody
Colors
  • Blue Sparkle
Fretboard Wood
Rosewood
Fretboard Markers
Dot
Nut
Bone
Tuners
Unknown
Neck Pickup
Humbucker
Bridge Pickup
Humbucker
Controls
  • Master Volume
  • Neck pickup volume
  • Bridge pickup volume
  • Master Tone (knob)
  • Pickup selector switch
Bridge
Stop
Tailpiece
None

2003:

G1617 production ends.

Body Width
12¾"
Body Depth
1½"
Body Style
Single Cutaway Solidbody
Colors
  • Blue Sparkle
Fretboard Wood
Rosewood
Fretboard Markers
Dot
Nut
Bone
Tuners
Unknown
Neck Pickup
Humbucker
Bridge Pickup
Humbucker
Controls
  • Master Volume
  • Neck pickup volume
  • Bridge pickup volume
  • Master Tone (knob)
  • Pickup selector switch
Bridge
Stop
Tailpiece
None