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Hi Andrew and welcome to FRETS!
Knowing as I do that someone is going to come along and ask for a pic or two of the model that you have your eye on I'll just ask ya if you have any pics of this model or can find one on the Internet to post for us? Once we see what you are dealing with I'm sure that you will get some great responses from the great folks here!
Although premature without seeing a pic and perhaps more it was not uncommon for import guitars to be engineered and assembled in a manner that is not easily serviceable. More specifically neck joints, doweled neck joints, Asian mystery glue, and poly finishes are pretty common place for many of these instruments with the problem being serviceability or the ability to repair the instrument without doing any unnatural acts....
So lets see what you have your eye on and hopefully we can help you out.
I've played one of these - really underwhelming to my ears - like a very quiet resonator. They are nasally sounding (IMO) and really easy to damage.
You would have to take the back off to repair that brace, and that would be a huge and likely ugly endeavor. I'm not sure how you would touch up the mess that results, you might look at a pretty big finish job after that. It is possible, too, that the one you are looking at sounds good because the brace is off - remember, it won't sound the same when finished!
You are asking for a ton of trouble with this. If the guitar was $50, it might be worth the pain and expense, but any more, and what you will end up with is a deeply unsatisfying experience, or a disassembled guitar hanging out in your garage. AND, since it has already partially failed, there could likely be other parts ready to fail too.
Just avoid it. I've regretted not picking up the one I saw too, then I realize how hard it is to work with actual WORKABLE guitars, and realize that I would have never gotten it done.
All IMHO, of course.
I see these things as the most extreme example of form over function and don't understand how a company can send these out into the world and expect them to have any kind of longevity. But maybe that's the point?
I first encountered this sound hole blockade on an Hofner 6-string lute from the '60s. Top cracks and loose braces were inaccessable thanks to a really cute vine-like obstruction completely filling the sound hole. I cut it out with a thin-kerf X-acto saw blade, performed the necessary repairs, then re-installed it using tinted eposy as a filler for the kerfs.
I've seen similar obstructions on Luna guitars, which also suffered from less-than-ideal neck angles and other maladies right outta the box. I don't know anything about Shiraki instruments, but this type of construction is a big red flag in my book.
Hmm - the one I looked at 6 months ago was selling for $250 US, in pretty good shape. That $675 can is pretty insane.
From what I'm reading, sounds like you might experience remorse after purchase. This is a wall hanger at best.
Mark's suggestion of removing the back is the way. His comments on what would happen sound right to me. Your "interesting adventure" might become a spectre. You will certainly pass the time vs money differential. Do it only if you want to learn in the process, and you get the guitar way cheap.
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