Re: lets see those super strats!!
Sorry to say I know all about the history of this Kramer Striker and my guitar tech routed it for the Gotoh Floyd and told me it was made of Honduran Mahogany. It was never offered in that wood type, but I bought it as a second on eBay and it may have been because they grabbed the wrong body blank at the factory.
Sorry to burst your bubble, but this is flat out impossible.
Honduran Mahogany can´t be imported into Korea for multiple reasons and it´s been this way since the late 70s. This means that a korean factory just plain can´t build a guitar out of Honduran Mahogany. Period. That said it may be mahogany, but not Honduran.
Sorry man, but considering the diverse reasons that this guitar simply cannot exist as what you say it is, I can´t believe it until I see photos of the bare wood, preferably the entire guitar stripped and ready to refinish...
BTW I´d love to meet the tech that can discern Honduran Mahogany from Indian, Indonesian or African, purely by grain structure and smell, from looking at something as small as a trem route, because they all have very similar grain structures and smells. Cripes I´ve been purpose trained to do so (luthier) and have a hard time sometimes. I definitely wouldn´t go out on a 50 yd limb and try to nail down the exact mahogany type without a larger sample, that´s ludicrous..
Weight and tone are indicators, but not any way to nail something down. I´ve built and played both featherlight Mahogany instruments like Ibanez Sabers, Jackson SLSMGs, and lighter Les Pauls, and have seen 14 pound alder strats as well. ANd the tonal variations available in alder are actually very large. MOST alder is generally "middle of the road"... but not all, for ex my DK-1 is by far my darkest guitar... alder, ebony/maple, floyd,.... Should be much brighter than full mahogany PRS Standard... but it´s exactly the other way around
