I have a very nice Heritage H-140 here. In almond burst color. This is a truly well crafted and toneful singlecut with excellent specs.

As you likely know the h-140 is a lighter weight version of the H-150. What's important to know here is that the guitar is not weight relieved. No chambers, no swiss cheese holes. It is made with a slightly slimmer body back and also more like a 60's slim taper contoured neck. The guitar weighs about 7 and 3/4lbs. So it's more of a medium weight guitar than a lightweight. And to my ears it has a heavyweight sound. Nice and big and full. It resonates the way it is supposed to as a true solid body guitar with a large total area mass to it. 

Tonally it has a very great signature of the classic single cut tonal spectrum. Great lasting sustain. Warm, blended midrange. Mids that have "crunch" to them that will put a smile on your face when the gain is turned up. And very importantly it has treble and high end that is detailed, articulate but not harsh. 

Many new late 2010's guitars even those of this build type i am hearing jaw clenching grainy treble from and it is disconcerting. This guitar here has smoothed over top end tone that sings. Note that the bridge pickup here is a Seymour Duncan JB, the neck is stock 59. The JB is a little thicker and ads a little more sustain and overall gain and power to your tone but i still consider it an old school sounding pickup. 

See pics for conditition. This guitar has been well taken care of it. And has only faint playwear anywhere on it. The frets are healthy and full, i have taken a fret pic as well. It has spent most of it's life in it's hardcase which is included. And that goes a long way in preserving a nitro finish and keeping it glossy and glowing. There is on thin small scratch on the front of the body and a small ding on the binding edge.

From a comparison cost standpoint. This guitar absolutely blows away the other more famous singlecut guitar maker right out of the water. I sell plenty of that brand but i cannot make a legit comparison cost wise to a Heritge because these are comparable to the historic models and custom shop models and production models i would says pre 1995 era. There have been to many changes to the sourcing of wood, and getting the correct mahogany and rosewood and then crafting the guitar to the highest specifications in the last 20 years. This guitar is a completely different animal than any production line singlecut costing less than 3500$ that is made in the late 2000's. It is something that your ears and your senses will tell you with certainty. It's not easy to find a heritage in any store though so they remain a very well regarded brand under the radar of the mainstream. 

I really dig this guitar. I am a guitar dealer myself but this one i will gladly play till it sells. I do feel conditionally it is a lot cleaner than many heritage's out there as there are some neglected and abused heritage orphans floating around the net. It's a joy to play and i hope the new owner enjoys it as much as i do. That's the story on this one. I will ship it will packed in a rectangular box with sufficient filler, with the strings slightly detuned and of course fully insured.

That's the story on this one. Thank you for reading and considering!