This is my third Harley Benton purchase (the first was the 8-string version of this guitar, the second was the WL-20 as a gift for my girlfriend), and while I think 8-strings are fun, I felt like I would get the most utility from 7 instead. I knew exactly where to look, since Harley Benton has satisfied every time. On the last two purchases, there was a pretty significant chunk taken out of each one. The R458 was missing a part of the headstock, the WL was missing a chunk on one of the bottom horns, and while neither affected functionality or sound, it was still disheartening since I know I ordered both new. That was not the case with this guitar, I'm not sure if the packaging is different or if the carriers are doing better about it, but this guitar showed up in mint physical condition. Tuning was rough of course, but it was shipped halfway across the world so that's to be expected. I'm very particular about the strings I like (D'addario EXL 10-59), so once I changed the strings and oiled the fretboard it was finally time to give it a fair judgment.
Tuning stability:
Overall the tuning is pretty solid. The strings needed stretched, but once that's done it wasn't too bad at keeping tune. I found that it can sometimes be hard to find the exact sweet spot for being in tune, mostly because it's a low tuning, but I feel like the tuners could be just a little more precise. But considering the price point, you could get much worse.
Playability and setup:
The setup was really good straight from the box! Most cheap guitars only seem "bad" because they're rushed from a factory, but even the cheapest craigslist guitars can be brought back to life. The Harley Benton didn't need that though, they got it pretty close at the start. The 3rd string saddle was a bit high, but that's a really easy fix and after that it plays perfectly. The neck is also great, thin so it's easy to fly around, but it's still thick enough to have some substance, which is a good balance for a 7 string.
Comfort:
The guitar is really light, but still feels solid. The neck is slightly heavy (I think that's where most of the weight is), but it doesn't dive. It's probably a good thing that the neck is heavy, for tuning and structural reasons. I've stood up for hours playing this guitar and not felt any pain whatsoever.
Sound:
The most conflicting point here. The pickups sound good; I assume most looking at this guitar are looking to play heavier/progressive styles of metal, and it not only excels for those tones, but can do some good lower-gain and clean stuff too. All pickup positions sound great. The only real issue is that the pickups are a little microphonic. My amp (a Marshall Valvestate) isn't very high-gain, my other guitars don't have feedback issues, but this one squeals left and right at anything above a lower practice volume. There's some DIY fixes, but it's something you'd expect most manufacturers to handle when it comes to potting pickups. You can use a noise gate, but sometimes you still get feeback before the gate kicks in, and it's a little frustrating. Neither of the other Harley Benton guitars I have are microphonic, so it could just be a bad set that I got. For recording purposes it's not so much of an issue, but for any practices or live shows it might be something to keep an eye out for.
Overall:
Like the title says, this is the best budget-priced 7-string guutar you can find, even if it's overseas. I was able to get this guitar and a few other things from Thomann, delivered to midwest USA, for around $160. That's less than some budget 7-strings available HERE, and the level of quality you're getting is probably the same if not better. I will always recommend Harley Benton to musicians of any skill and budget level. I love this guitar!