The problem is that from a distance it still looks like a cheap guitar. There's a point where you're better off selling 3 stepping stone guitars and buying one really nice one. But never ever give away your upgraded parts. Always restore the guitar to stock and keep your nice upgrades before selling.
I'm not saying this as a gear snob, nor is it a slam against anyone in this thread.
I'm saying it as a player who's done it both ways, and I still like upgrading inexpensive guitars. But, the best way is to buy mid/high end guitars used and cheap, and THEN put the upgrades on them.
Polishing a turd never works. You still have the dead sounding wood and tell tale signs of a budget guitar.


I'm saying it as a player who's done it both ways, and I still like upgrading inexpensive guitars. But, the best way is to buy mid/high end guitars used and cheap, and THEN put the upgrades on them.
Polishing a turd never works. You still have the dead sounding wood and tell tale signs of a budget guitar.
I have upgraded a squire Standard tele $119 to a fantastic guitar that is as good as any Tele anywhere period. The epi 335 was mid levelish and it is also as good as a 335 gets. I will never agree with people that say the body wood changes the sound like this or the fretboard wood makes it bright etc. An electric guitar has strings that run from the machines to the bridge , being tensioned at the nut and saddles. The pickup placement and scale length determine the sound of the guitar , not the wood. You can change the sound with different pots and caps but those are tweaks.We think waaaay too much and apply value to things that do not have any effect quite often in the world of guitars. Feel free to not agree but remember you are using a very imperfect and limited thing to make your opinion , the human ear. To prove those things you would have to make blind recordings and change the pieces and parts on the same instrument because 2 similar instruments are NOT THE SAME GUITAR.
The problem is that from a distance it still looks like a cheap guitar. There's a point where you're better off selling 3 stepping stone guitars and buying one really nice one. But never ever give away your upgraded parts. Always restore the guitar to stock and keep your nice upgrades before selling.
I'm not saying this as a gear snob, nor is it a slam against anyone in this thread.
I'm saying it as a player who's done it both ways, and I still like upgrading inexpensive guitars. But, the best way is to buy mid/high end guitars used and cheap, and THEN put the upgrades on them.
Polishing a turd never works. You still have the dead sounding wood and tell tale signs of a budget guitar.
I think it's more the level of satisfaction. Even if you have sunk 1000 bucks into modifying a Squier, it IS still a Squier, which is a cheapo brand. Not the same level of satisfaction from a factory-standard real Strat.
That's the thing, you don't put 1000 bucks into modifying a Squire. You put maybe $250 into it. For that you can get a guitar that sounds as good as an American Standard.
That's one of the best parts of this, if your hot rodded squire gets f'ed and is no longer playable you just go buy another one for dirt cheap and swap all of the custom parts from the old oneThat's the thing, you don't put 1000 bucks into modifying a Squire. You put maybe $250 into it. For that you can get a guitar that sounds as good as an American Standard.
Are you saying you'd rather have a better name on the headstock than a better playing and sounding guitar?