Latest Project Finished

rgand

New member
In November, my wife asked me if I would like a new guitar for Christmas. I told her yes but I would just strip all the electronics out of anything I got so I told her I’d look for one I could mod to my likes. Really all I needed was a good body to build on.

On Craigslist I found a black 2003 vintage Squier Affinity Strat with a rosewood fretboard and white pickguard. The body was surprisingly clean and free of dings and scratches. It was solid wood instead of plywood and the rest really didn’t matter. As it turned out, the wood is a good piece of whatever that has nice sustain and tonal qualities. At first I thought it was alder but it’s probably agathis or basswood and I’ve exchanged a couple emails with a tech at Fender to find out what it really is. The neck needed some serious work. The frets were worn out, the tuners were junk and most felt like metal galling on metal. The truss rod couldn't bring the neck into line completely. The pickups were import-quality nothings. It sounded OK but the tone control didn't seem to make much difference. It was a good starting place.

I ordered a Warmoth Pro standard thin profile roasted maple neck with a roasted maple fretboard, stainless 6150 frets, 10-16” compound radius and a black GraphTech TUSQ XL nut. I got Fender staggered, locking tuners for it. Oh, yeah, I had Warmoth cut the headstock down to Tele-style because I like the looks.

I had about 6 weeks to figure out the wiring. After drilling all kinds of holes in the original pickguard and fooling around with a bunch of different wiring ideas, I decided to keep it simple. I used CTS B500K pots, a Switchcraft 3-way toggle, a push/push master series/parallel switch in a Warmoth cream-colored pickguard. The neck pickup is a Bill Lawrence L500R and the bridge pickup is a DiMarzio F-spaced DP-103 36th Anniv PAF (neck).

I blocked the trem and took the back cover off (sounds better to my ears). This was actually the first thing I did. The only trem I ever liked was a Bigsby style I had years ago on a Tele copy.

So after all that, all that’s original on the body is the output jack, the bridge & saddles and the funky zinc trem block, which I’ll probably take out and replace with one of the heavy steel ones.

I’m pleased and this thing plays great. The only project I ever did that was more work was to make a solid-body electric mandolin completely from scratch. It was fun and I’ll do another one some time. Here are the before and after pics:
 

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Re: Latest Project Finished

Thanks, Trey. It'll be fun to see what you end up doing for your neck.
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

maple fretboards are the best. That's beautiful!
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

I remember when I first started playing thinking that Tele headstocks were the worst. Thought they looked like a nose. Now I really dig them, especially on guitars you don't expect. Cool beans
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

That split fretboard is an interesting idea. Warmer on the high 3 strings and brighter on the lower 3. I'd almost want the body in reverse.
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

I just replaced the 'after' photo. I had to Photoshop it to bring out the cream pickguard.
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

That split fretboard is an interesting idea. Warmer on the high 3 strings and brighter on the lower 3. I'd almost want the body in reverse.

I think so, suppose to take out the shrill/too bright tone that some complain about maple.
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

I think so, suppose to take out the shrill/too bright tone that some complain about maple.
I like the bright tone maple gives. I tried stainless frets which probably add to that. They need a bit of polishing yet, but I'll do that when I replace the strings next time.

Another thing I did was to remove all the factory overspray in the bottom of the neck pocket. It was very thick and really rough. For that I used a wide, flat chisel for a scraper then finished with sandpaper so the neck could bolt up to nice, clean wood.

The tone really brightened with the new neck and maybe those things contributed to that. Sustain went up significantly, too.

Now there's this Tele I have... LOL, where does this mod addiction end?
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

I think you made some serious improvements on that guitar.

Roasted maple necks are great. I just got one a few months ago. No finish required, light weight, stable.
 
Re: Latest Project Finished

I think you made some serious improvements on that guitar.

Roasted maple necks are great. I just got one a few months ago. No finish required, light weight, stable.
Thanks. I really like the feel of the roasted maple. I expect good performance over time.
 
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