bungalowbill
Luckybastidologist
Re: "Improving" the electric guitar...
Good wood and finishes....everything else is personal taste.
Good wood and finishes....everything else is personal taste.
"Improve a Strat?"
Sure: humbuckers, archeed top body, set neck, tune-o-matic, 2 volume-2 tone, 3x3 tuners, block inlays...and voila! You have a Les Paul. Perfection!
Leo got it right the first time.
Twice.
-All new strats need 22 frets, no more, no less.
1. medium jumbo frets
2. flatter fingerboard radius...12"?
3. master volume and master tone with .02 cap connected to middle terminals of volume and tone pots.
4. blender pot
5. a5 ant surfer neck and middle
6. a2 ant tex hot custom bridge or custom shop a2 hot tapped Tele ala Strat bridge pickup with baseplate
7. master tone with push/pull if tapped bridge pickup is used
To improve the guitar, you've got to disassociate yourself from allegiances to concepts like "This is a Strat" or "This is a Les Paul" because those guitars are defined by their traditional specifications.
You have to look at the guitar as a blank slate, acknowledge what has worked over time, and be honest about what could use improvement. You also need to remove yourself from the classic tones of the Strat, LP, etc. - those tones weren't classic before they were more or less arbitrarily created by people using the equipment of the time.
The thing is to have the most effective tool for the intended application. If your intent is to get tones like the classic recordings and performances of people using Strats, use a Strat. It's not a formula that needs improving in that case, because even it's inherent "flaws" will contribute to creating the desired result. It's the right tool for the job.
If your goal is to create something else, look at what you need and design your instrument around those needs.
Flatter fretboard is the first thing to improve. 12" at least. Nut must be wide.
Find a way to have a high bridge (string high above the pickguard) but still have a one-way only tremolo (sitting on the wood when not in use). So that a broken string doesn't throw your whole guitar out of tone, and it's better for sound.
The electrics compartment should be accessible without having to loosen then strings. The Tele is much better here.
For Les Pauls:
I like the John Sykes wiring - with the bridge tone knob disconnected. For many of us it's pretty useless.
I kind of agree that Leo screwed up a bit when he decided not to rear route the pickups and control cavity on the Strat, or at least split them into distinct segments like the Tele and the fruity guitars Dangles likes
The "everything on one huge pickguard" idea is the biggest weakness in the Strat design IMO. It was probably done to make assembly easier.
Just improve on the guitar and you won't need to improve anything on the guitar. LOL
Other than that, I vote for badger pelt Strats in 09..