






🎸 Own the stage with vintage vibes and modern versatility!
The Sterling by Music Man Axis AX3S is a budget-friendly electric guitar featuring a resonant basswood body, fast asymmetrical maple neck with jatoba fretboard, and powerful humbucker pickups controlled via a 5-way toggle switch. Finished with a striking black and white binding aesthetic, it offers professional-grade playability and tone versatility, backed by a final USA setup. Ideal for millennial pros seeking classic style with room to customize and grow their sound.
| ASIN | B079GPGX7C |
| Back Material | Basswood |
| Battery type | Alkaline |
| Best Sellers Rank | #170,361 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #1,633 in Solid Body Electric Guitars |
| Body Material | Basswood |
| Color Name | Black with White Binding |
| Customer Reviews | 3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars (43) |
| Date First Available | January 30, 2018 |
| Fretboard Material | Jatoba Wood |
| Guitar Bridge System | Tremolo |
| Guitar Pickup Configuration | H-H |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 7 pounds |
| Item model number | AX3S-BK-R1 |
| Material Type | Stainless Steel |
| Neck Material Type | Maple |
| Number of Strings | 6 |
| Product Dimensions | 36.25 x 1.75 x 12.5 inches |
| Scale Length | 25.5 Inches |
| String Material | Nickel |
| Top Material | Linden Wood |
| Voltage | 240 Volts |
A**R
Great value for the money!
I've long wanted an Axis - I still plan on getting a Music Man Axis Super Sport down the road, but they clock in at north of $2500. I bought my Sterling Axis for $350 as a guitar that I could tweak, add a GK pickup, mod, practice fretwork, etc. It's my cheapest ax, but it's quickly becoming my favorite! Why? Simple - the neck. It feels fantastic. It's wider but thinner than my Strat or my Gretsch, and has an asymmetric cut. After playing my Axis a while, I pick up my Strat and it feels like I'm holding a baseball bat. Sterling didn't cut corners on feel, or, for that matter, on pickups. The humbucker pickups are hot and have a nice, full tone. The five-way switch serves up a nice pallet of tones from the two humbuckers. So, to sum: The good: - Resonant basswood body, same as it's more expensive EBMM cousin. Almost as loud on its own as my semi-hollow Gretsch. - Great pickups, hot, useful selection of tones from the five way switch. - Truss rod adjustment at the heel of the neck, no wrench needed. - Sculpted neck joint, held on with five bolts. - Light weight and compact, but it's a full 25.5" scale length. - Nice finish and a matching headstock (I'm partial to those). - Action is set nice and low out of the box (but see below). - That neck! Plays great, it's fast. That's really why you want it. Of course, at $350, there are compromises to reach the price point, as you'd expect. The not-so-good: - Tuning machines feel cheap, are notchy to turn, small, and fiddly. They're by no means unusable, but you can tell they're cheap. I may replace with a set of ratios down the road. - Tremolo bridge is so-so. It's a 2-point vintage style (like a Strat), which I like, but feels cheap. The arm always has some play, unless it's nearly cranked down. Out of the box, it's decked (only down bends, no up), and the springs are cranked pretty tight. Because of this, it takes a little effort to bend; much more than my Strat, which I have configured as a floating trem. I think it's setup this way because it makes tuning easier - it acts like a hardtail when not bending. That also means you could do a drop-D tuning without having to completely retune the instrument. However, I don't see any reason why you couldn't set it up to float. I haven't done that, though, so I don't know how stable it would tune if setup to float. If the spacing fits, I may eventually replace the bridge with a Gotoh. - Fretwork is mostly OK, but there's a buzz in my low E string at the 6th and 7th frets. I'm 90% sure that's because the frets aren't completely level. That could probably be dialed out by raising the action, but I plan on doing a level and crown job to fix it properly. - Out of the box, it needed intonation. Honestly though, I don't consider that a minus. Most guitars need a proper setup after shipping, unless you buy from a local dealer that has already done a setup. In short, it's a fantastic budget guitar - just don't expect precision finishing like you'd find buying a higher end model from a dealer. It's certainly playable out of the box, but will play better with a proper setup. Plan on spending $70-100 unless you know how to do a setup and fret level yourself. Beyond that, it could be absolutely killer with another $200-300 spent to put in better tuning machines and a better trem. At that point, you'd have a $500-$600 guitar that I'd put up against any MIM Strat, any day. Play on!
A**R
Great Gruitar at an affordable price!
The tremolo is useless, it is so loose there is no real tonal control. I never really use it to begin with but I do wished it weren't so loose. The guitar tone is Fantastic. The neck action is superb, the body is brilliantly designed. This guitar was based on Edward Van Halen Wolfgang model back in the 90s when he had a line of models exclusively with Ernie Ball. This is prettyclose to that model without the high price. Great guitar at an affordable price.
S**T
These are probably hit and miss like a lot of guitars these days
Sent back the first e string ran to close to edge of neck. fret ends were a little Sharp feeling. Otherwise it would've been a five star guitar.
M**L
It Rocks!
Looks great, well made. Sounds good with rich deep clear tones. The tremolo bar doesn't work at all, it's just for show apparently, not that I use it at all and most probably don't either. The nut seems like it's made out of some type of plastic, definitely not bone. It's a smaller parlor guitar type in length but has some real weight to it. Feels solid and doesn't feel cheap at all. It's a quality build for sure. It has passive pickups. Doesn't have a battery as listed, no place for a battery as I opened up the back and found none, lol. The fretboard is made out of Jatoba wood also known as Brazilian Cherry which is a very hard wood but it feels nice, not Rosewood as listed even though it does say Jatoba wood earlier in the description. Looks good though. The neck is Maple and really nice and smooth and really great for playing. Has a really nice finish on it. The neck isn't clunky or rough or overly big or long. Low D type. Makes playing easy. Frets are nice and smooth, no sharp edges. Tuners are decent. The 5 way toggle switch is really nice and tight & solid & gives you some really nice sound & tone options to play with ranging from more tremble & clear sharp sounds to more bassy & rich thick deep sounds. Toggle switch doesn't rattle either. Everything is tight on this guitar, knobs also, nothing loose. Volume & Tone knobs feel good and work as expected. Has some nice bark to the sound. Paint job shines but gets finger smudges on it easy. The brown fretboard and black body look really good together. If hooked to a nice guitar pedal & a bigger and better amp this guitar would really rock & roll. I'm not using a pedal and just have it hooked to a Fender Frontman 10G Amp but it still rocks. It's set low, plays low with low action. It came with light soft strings, didn't say what kind. I'm gonna replace them with some good medium gauge strings. Bought it from Chicago Music Exchange thru Amazon because they had it for $12 dollars cheaper at $299 with free prime shipping. They delivered one day earlier than expected. It was doubled boxed and well protected. Came setup and ready to tune after they tell you to wait 24 hours for it to heat up in your house. It's made in Indonesia. I'm gonna have fun with this guitar, Peace & rock on. 🎸
J**E
Great fixer-upper or starter guitar
I ripped out the electronics and pickups from this guitar and put in a DiMarzio distortion master pickup at the bridge - a cheap upgrade at ~$100 - and this is an amazing guitar. It will be a good starter guitar OOB, but if you have a little know-how you can make this really great with little effort. The neck is chunkier than I'm used to, but I got used to it. Overall it's great value!
D**J
Stellar Sterling!
For the price this guitar is great. I bought 3 of these (just white one here) to practice fixing, scalloping fretboard, refinish, change pickups to learn soldering, etc. and they’re fantastic guitars as is. Definitely needed setup and fret dressing but that’s okay for the price.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 days ago