I do indeed. It's brand sold by Thomann in Germany. If you are unaware of Thomann, they are an amazing firm, run with Teutonic efficiency and they pioneered the three year warranty when it was unheard of. They ship all over the world, but I have spent thousands of pounds with them over the years and they are totally fault free. Small or large goods, doesn't matter. They encourage you to buy and send back if you don't like, and when brands like Behringer were dirty words, they offered these warranties on goods others slagged off as unreliable rubbish. It paid off.
Then they started to offer Chinese products sourced in large numbers and with their own brands - microphones, loudspeakers, power amplifiers - the same keen prices and warranty. Harley Benson is their guitar brand, and the guitars are sourced from factories in China.
We all have opinions on the chinese Fender, Gibson, PRS and Rickenbacker counterfeits, but a bit of Googling reveals some as dire unplayable instruments, and others as absolute gems. Harley Benson are the good ones. Musicians seem to love them because they play well, sound good and have a bit of kudos now.
The only thing to watch out for is length of production run for these instruments. Thomann will buy hundreds, maybe even thousands, of an individual model, but when gone, the next batch may be different finishes, have different hardware and sound different - the same applies to Chinese lighting kit.
If you look on AliExpress at the moment you will see some very similar guitars, but if you do the figures, the Thomann ones may well be cheaper due to container shipping costs vs one-off air freight.
I was going to buy some PA speakers direct from China, but I bought from Thomann because it was exactly the same product. For years, I sold a microphone made in China - excellent sound and cheap - I sold over a hundred then one day, sales stopped. Thomann had the same one, with their T-Bone brand on it for less money that I paid the Chinese supplier. Annoying, but it IS a great microphone.
They also sell the Shure SM-57 counterfeit many people were buying believing them genuine - they had the factory put the T-Bone name on the grill instead of Shure, and priced it really cheap and called it TB-75 or similar. It's a great budget mic for beginners, a solid microphone, once not pretending to be a Shure.
If you phone Thomann, the minute they answer and you say "hello" they switch to flawless English.
There are few other suppliers who have these kinds of products, and often have B stock - where they are the returns - at even sillier prices.
I've had two guitars I sourced for friends and they hold up very well. Both were kept and not returned and they still have them.