How many of these arguements against strats are valid?

For volume swells, it's great. But for any fast rhythm playing, it's in your way. I do the latter a lot more frequently than the former.
It never got in my way, but my first real guitar was a Strat, so I got used to it. And no matter what guitar I play or build from parts, I need the volume knob in the same place.
 
The middle pickup is used mostly in combination with neck or bridge. In that role it can be lowered without losing too much sound.
 
What I personally hate about Strats is, when they put humbuckers on them, they put the bridge pickup like a mile off from the bridge itself. But I guess why they do it is they kinda need some wood there for the trem and the screws that the trem pivots on.

Still, I loved the looks and the feel of my old Road Worn Strat, just could never get that bridge pickup sounding how I wanted no matter what pickup I had in there.
 
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What I personally hate about Strats is, when they put humbuckers on them, they put the bridge pickup like a mile off from the bridge itself. But I guess why they do it is they kinda need some wood there for the trem and the screws that the trem pivots on.

Still, I loved the looks and the feel of my old Road Worn Strat, just could never get that bridge pickup sounding how I wanted no matter what pickup I had in there.

Well, the hinged tremolo block changes the sound, too. A hardtail might be more to your liking.
 
What I personally hate about Strats is, when they put humbuckers on them, they put the bridge pickup like a mile off from the bridge itself. But I guess why they do it is they kinda need some wood there for the trem and the screws that the trem pivots on.

Still, I loved the looks and the feel of my old Road Worn Strat, just could never get that bridge pickup sounding how I wanted no matter what pickup I had in there.
Don't go around telling people this, or else they'll start to think there's more to the different electric guitar styles than the wood 🤫
 
Perhaps the greatest thing about the strat is that a few of these arguments are easily addressed because the guitar is the best modding platform we have.
 
Well, the hinged tremolo block changes the sound, too. A hardtail might be more to your liking.
While I'm very well aware it's not quite the same as the guitar being a hardtail, I did try brass, steel, and zamak blocks, as well as brass, block steel, and bent steel saddles. I also had the trem decked against the body and 5 springs. None of those fixed the "issue". I liked the steel block with the bent steel saddles, which is the most traditional "Strat-y", so I have a feeling a hardtail would just be another flavor of "not right for me". I mean, after all, the bridge pickup would remain in the same spot.

But who knows. Maybe you're right. But I spent so much time and effort into getting that Strat "right" for me and failing, that I don't really feel like giving them another chance... for now.
 
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