I've had quite a few Taylors, and in fact just purchased a new one (812e 12 fret, which I love overall).
One thing I've noted across many of them is what I call a "thud" fret. That's a position on a string that, when fretted and played, doesn't have near the sustain as other fretted strings (or even this same string, fretted at a different position). Instead, its tone decays noticeably faster and produces something closer to a "thud" than a nice long ring.
I've consistently noticed that if there's going to be a "thud" fret on a Taylor, it's on the 5th string, 5th fret.
Try it on yours. Fret the 5th string/5th fret with your finger, and pluck the string. Now play other frets on the same string (or nearby frets on adjacent strings), perhaps fret at the 3rd fret or the 6th. Try counting how long you can clearly hear the tone of each.
Do you notice more sustain on all the positions over 5/5?
My new 812e-12 Fret thuds on 5/5, but only when capo'd. In other words, if I put a capo on fret 2, then finger fret at 5, on the fifth string, it thuds. If I don't have the capo on, I don't get a thud on 5/5
I sent Taylor a letter about this a year or so ago and did not get a reply.
I don't think I'm crazy. I've compared *many* guitars at local shops, and have seen this problem on other makers, so I know it's not *just* Taylor (though it seems more consistent on Taylors)
Any thoughts on this -- and possible remedies? Some might say I'm being too picky. You would not notice this probably when playing chords. But when playing finger style or flat picking, it can stand out like a sore thumb.
Michael