DreX
New member
Re: making cheap guitars awesome
My non MIJ imports often have shortcomings, especially the Korean, Chinese and Indonesian guitars. The Indonesian FMS Fenders all had nuts that were nearly a millimeter too high (but almost no guitar manufacturer sets them as low as they should be). My Chinese Epi L.E.'s has really poor finish work, I had to go over them with rubbing compound to remove the fine sand marks. The Korean Epis often have rough/noisy frets so I go over them with microfiber pads. Neck angle is never a problem in any of them. The moral of the story is that all these shortcoming are DIY fixable in under an hour, so you really have to look closely at the wood quality because that's about the only thing you can't replace, and there's virtually no proof that an expensive electric has wood that in some manner objectively out performs the wood found in lower cost electrics.
And snob appeal, that's a thing.
I don't know if you have just bad luck or you live in Antarctica today and wake up in Timbuktu the next day. I have 1 Chinese Epiphone, 2 Indo Ibanezes, and 2 MIM Strats, and I never have any issue with the smoothness, especially the frets. There are no frets that protrude from the side of the neck. No, really. On the other hand, I almost bought a Japanese Charvel San Dimas but backed out cause the fret wires were sticking out from the side of the neck.
My non MIJ imports often have shortcomings, especially the Korean, Chinese and Indonesian guitars. The Indonesian FMS Fenders all had nuts that were nearly a millimeter too high (but almost no guitar manufacturer sets them as low as they should be). My Chinese Epi L.E.'s has really poor finish work, I had to go over them with rubbing compound to remove the fine sand marks. The Korean Epis often have rough/noisy frets so I go over them with microfiber pads. Neck angle is never a problem in any of them. The moral of the story is that all these shortcoming are DIY fixable in under an hour, so you really have to look closely at the wood quality because that's about the only thing you can't replace, and there's virtually no proof that an expensive electric has wood that in some manner objectively out performs the wood found in lower cost electrics.
Although there are differences in quality, it is not as wide as the difference in price. It's just the labor and marketing that make all American and Japanese guitars are so expensive.
And snob appeal, that's a thing.