It's probably worth a separate post on my review of Solo Music Gear kit so here it goes.
Price: This wasn't bad at all. Sub $200 US. With a couple of extra finishing items thrown in the cart, plus free shipping over $50. There are higher priced kits there, but with no hardware included. In hindsight it would have been a higher quality body, but for this price point I'm not going to complain too much. 4 out of 5.
Shipping: Shipping was pretty fast. I ordered this on a Thursday night and shipped the next day (Friday). I assumed it sat around in customs over that weekend (Canada to US), and it arrived that Monday. For free shipping and no duties/taxes owed, this get a 5 out of 5.
Quality: This gets a 3 out of 5 from me. In my research and own experience, kit builds are on the cheaper side if using everything from the box. Regardless if you're building a guitar, bass, dulcimer, ukulele, etc. you'll need to replace the strings at a minimum. All hardware that came in the box was functional. The neck/fretboard gets the top marks for me. The body, less so. It's basswood and is on the lower spectrum of quality out there. The pickguard I upgraded to needed some different holes drilled and everything doesn't line up 100%. A small piece of the routed body is sticking out. A little annoyed, but hey, what are you gonna do?
Finishing: 3 out of 5, but this is user error and not reflective of Solo. They have guides on their site how to finish, plus other sites. I should have taken more care in applying the poly, but after 15 coats I had had enough
Assembly: 2 out of 5. Reading reviews of the various kits out there you come across "I built this in an hour with my kid." Yea, right. The pickguard wiring was pretty awful and the solder joints weren't very strong. Rewiring a new pickguard does not count against Solo, but the solder quality and rats nest does. Screwing things by hand is the safe way to go to not damage anything, but they could have done a better job with pilot hole alignment and width.
Overall: I'll give this a 3.5 out of 5. Considering this is a kit build and not a Warmoth partscaster build, I'm satisfied overall and would recommend them to you guys. This is definitely a step up from my first kit build from TheFretWire. Don't bother looking for them; they're no longer in business for whatever reason. The good part about kit builds is you can apply a finish in whatever manner you want. The down side is the quality of hardware and the body prep for that hardware. It may be worth your while upgrading the parts first before committing with a drill. Overall recommendation: this is a $200 kit that plays pretty well. Upgrading some parts are needed to make it play like a $500 instrument.