

INANI MK-II
MOBILE USERS: DESKTOP VERSION OF WEBSITE CONTAINS MORE PICTURES
Technical Specs:
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Model INANI - MK-II
Dimensions Width-12", Thickenss-1.75", Total Length-38.5"
Scale Length 25" (6 String), 26" (7 String)
Body Wood Alder, Ash, Black Limba, Mahogany, Soft Maple
Neck/Core Wood Hard Maple, Wenge, Purple Heart
Top (optional) Figured Maple (curly and quilted. Supplies vary)
Fretboard Wood Bocote, Maple, Pau Ferro, Ebony, Rosewood
Fretboard Radius 10", 12", 15", 16"
Scalloped Fretboard Optional 0.5mm depth and 1mm depth
Frets 24 Jumbo Stainless Steel
Neck Width at Nut 1 11/16"
Available Neck Thickness 17mm (this requires carbon fiber upgrade), 19mm, 21mm
(back of neck to top of
fretboard on first fret)
Fret Markers Epoxy or Wood
Tuning Machines Grover, Graph Tech, Schaller, Generic
Truss Rod 2 Way Adjustable Spoke Wheel
Finish Hard-wax Oil Body/Neck/Headstock
French Polish Shellac Body/Headstock w/Hard-wax Oil Neck
Bridge Kahler, Floyd Rose, Graph Tech, Schaller
Pickups Seymour Duncan, Dimarzio, Machina (Coming Soon)
Switches 3 Way for pickup selection, 2 way for bridge pickup coil split
Push/Pull Volume for Neck Pickup coil split.
Electronics Cavity Graphite painted cavity with aluminum taped cover plate shielding
Neck Attachment Bolt-On or Neck-Though




6 String Bolt-On Starting at $1,199 CAD
7 String Bolt-On Starting at $1,699 CAD
Build & Price
Build Examples
I'll toss more photos on here as I build more of these
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INANI 6 MK-II Bolt-On
(this is only an example. This guitar is not for sale. It's mine)
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Tigerwood body w/Paduak neck (crazy sustain/harmonics, but heavy)
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Hard-wax oil finish (whole guitar)
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Scalloped Pau Ferro fretboard
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Kahler 2300 Series trem
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Jumbo Stainless Steel Frets
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Maple fret markers & headstock logo
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Dimarzio Rainmaker (neck) & X2N (bridge) pickups
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Grover 406C tuners
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250k volume pot
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2x 2-Way toggle for bridge and neck coil split
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3 Way Switch for pickup selection
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Paduak electronics cavity plate
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Story Time!
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I though I was buying African mahogany. It was rough sawn, labeled as African mahogany, and priced as African mahogany. Seemed a bit heavy, but it said the words and looked like it in rough sawn form.
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Anyway, I get it home, let it acclimatize to my shop, then joint and plane it. Turns out that it's not, in fact, mahogany, but rather tigerwood, and like, waaay harder than African mahogany. More suitable for a neck than a body. I considered just using it as a top, but then I thought "what if?"
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It might be a little heavy, but the tigerwood/paduak combo absolutely sings. Incredible sustain and harmonics. Easily the most articulate guitar I own.
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