Making a vintage style strat...

Re: Making a vintage style strat...

Sorry about the late reply, guys! Got back from a trip in the city, what a time.

But after reading the experiences and info from everyone, I've decided to keep the mahogany for a later project and get either Swamp Ash or Alder!
Which would be the warmer out of the two?

Alder is the one you want...Ash Strats tend to be very toppy and peaky
 
Re: Making a vintage style strat...

Ya know, all this said in your original post you said it has to be rally warm...Strats just aren't warm guitars...none of them.

I mean an alder body Strat might be warmer than an Ash body...a Strat with Alnico II pickups might be warmer than one with Alnico V pickups but all Strats are bright...
 
Re: Making a vintage style strat...

+1 I don't think that's going to sound very vintagey. You need Swamp ash or Alder to build a vintage strat. BUT seeing that you were really asking opinions on the bridge... I would go with the more expensive Fender bridge or a Calliham bridge. I have no real experience with Calliham bridges but they get great reviews everywhere.
 
Re: Making a vintage style strat...

Ya know, all this said in your original post you said it has to be rally warm...Strats just aren't warm guitars...none of them.

I mean an alder body Strat might be warmer than an Ash body...a Strat with Alnico II pickups might be warmer than one with Alnico V pickups but all Strats are bright...

I don't know about that... I have played some Strats, usually slab boards that will just crush any Les Paul. Seeing that he is building the guitar I think you could also address warming it up by putting in an over wound pickups. Not excessively over wound, but just a bit. I have three Strats that have either been built from scratch or customized. The real key is the fingerboard... Brazilian Rosewood will absolutely add some warmth to it, then its just a matter of picking the right pickups. My 57 RI has a birdseye maple neck with BW fingerboard and a set of Texas Hots and it sounds killer. I also have another I built that has Surfers, basically the same type of neck, then I have a third one that I built that has Fralin Blues specials in her. The Fralins are beautiful clean, but I think the Duncans drive a lot better. But for Clean and Warm..... the Fralins bring it...
 
Making a vintage style strat...

Get a bridge with a good sized block. If you want warmer go with a brass block. If you can get along with fat necks, get a fat neck too. I'm talkin like Warmoth's boat or fatback contour here. Fat necks = fatter tone, IME.
 
Re: Making a vintage style strat...

My pretty corroded penny's worth:

My experience with Callaham is that it tends to brighten up. YMMV with that. The arm bushing is great and workmanship is also great.

I like the Gotoh 510 with steel block (some would say that's bright too), Fender and Gotoh vintage style bridges are also great. Its got to be a CRS steel block if I'm replacing a block/bridge on my guitar. I think there's a significant difference in the sound of a CRS steel vs a sintered steel block in the one's I've replaced.
 
Re: Making a vintage style strat...

......where are you planning to get the body from?? There are some good US builders with reasonable shipping rates to Aus.

I was thinking about getting a pre cut body from Stewmac, seems they're the only ones I know of so far, know of any better suppliers 'value for money' wise?

So Strats actually started out with humbuckers and Floyd Rose, 24 frets...the Superstrat...and now you want to make it vintage?

^I never knew that, oh my.

I was thinking aged hardware and pickups that sound like they've been loved for 50 - 60 odd years
 
Re: Making a vintage style strat...

Years ago I disassembled my '63 bridge/vibrato and weighed everything: the block, the saddles, the bridge...

Then I weighed the bridge/vibrato of my MIJ Strats. They were all slightly lighter in weight even though they looked about the same.

Then I bought a brand new Fender '62 Reissue bridge/vibrato and weighed it and all of the parts weighed the same as my old '63.

So I've been using the Fender '62 Reissue bridge/vibrato on my Strats (other than my'63) since then.
 
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