you know if you go on Aliexpress you can chat with the builder and get what ever you want
for around the same price
those holes are not evenly spaced
I talked with one guy about getting the vine inlay and a specific headstock
we chatted for days and exchanged pictures to illustrate what I wanted
then for some reason I just never ordered it
at some point it just felt like he didnt understand what I expected
good luck hope it works out
what recourse do you have with ebay if the neck is unusable
plan on leveling the frets
and touching up the nut
edit
I got a $25 neck off amazon some years back and still have yet to mount it to the project
changed the nut
made my own waterslide logo
got every thing just havent mounted it
Those headstock holes look like they were hand drilled.
I built a neck on Warmoth the other day, roasted maple neck and board, stainless frets, optional profile, optional radius, and it was like $300. There was a similar, minus the stainless frets, Fender neck on Reverb for $200.
On much of the stuff I have to repair, it usually is. I had to rework one of those kit copies of a Vai JEM, and not only were the holes located at haphazard places, but none of them were perpendicular to the face of the guitar. A simple drill press is unknown to many of these makers. I cannot find the video anymore, but 2 years ago I saw an open air guitar factory in Indonesia under a large grass-roofed hut with a dirt floor. Workers were standing at bamboo tables hand-making these instruments - even finishing operations. No humidity controls, no quality control, and no worker safety in place. We are talking the most rudimentary of production methods. I was amazed how presentable some of the guitars looked when boxed up for shipping. Don't count on properly dried woods (this explains all the twisted necks) and massive variations in construction from guitar to guitar.