
PRS Custom 24 - Gray Black
Artikelnummer 1614079Electric guitar, Mahogany Body, Maple Top, Mahogany Neck, Rosewood Fretboard, DMO humbuckers, GEN III Tremolo, Phase III Locking Tuners, Hardshell Case, Gray Black finish.
PRS Custom 24 Gray Black
The One That Started It All. The Custom 24 is the original PRS. Since its introduction, it has offered a unique option for serious players and defined PRS tone and playability.
Played by internationally touring artists, gigging musicians, and aspiring players, the Custom 24 features a figured maple top and mahogany back with a 24-fret, 25” scale length mahogany neck with rosewood fretboard. Anchored by PRS’s patented Gen III tremolo and Phase III tuners with wing buttons the Custom 24 is known for its playability, versatility, and tuning stability.
The Custom 24 is outfitted with PRS DMO treble and bass pickups with volume and tone controls and a 5-way blade switch. DMO (Dynamic, Musical, Open) pickups were personally designed by Paul Reed Smith and the PRS New Products Engineering team. From our own hands-on research into coveted vintage pickup models to advancements in signal analyzation and “tuning” technology, these pickups incorporate every detail of pickup knowledge PRS has gained in recent years of R&D.
PRS DMO pickups have a “wide open” sound with vocal character, meaning they deliver clear, pleasant-sounding tones across a wide range of frequencies (bass to treble) in each pickup.
The Custom 24 is the quintessential PRS guitar. This iconic instrument was the first model that Paul Reed Smith brought to the public at PRS Guitars’ first Winter NAMM show in 1985 and has been a top seller ever since.
PRS Custom 24 Gray Black
- Mahogany Body
- Violin Carved Maple Top
- Set Neck Design
- Mahogany Neck
- Rosewood Fretboard
- Pattern Thin Neck Profile
- 24 Frets, 25" Scale
- 10" Radius
- 4,28cm Width At Nut
- PRS Patended Tremolo GEN III
- PRS Phase III Locking Tuners with Wing Buttons
- DMO Humbuckers
- Volume-, Tone Control and 5-way Blade Pickup Switch
- PRS Hardshell Case