I guess we all know about it: you have to play your guitar for a certain amount of time or to perform some modifications before you go "Yeah, that's MY guitar" That magic moment when you feel you've nailed it; that special magical something that tells you your guitar is broken in properly. Let's share our experiences with what you had to do or when you found out "This is it."
My two strats. Above: my 2007 Mexican made 68 classic series "Voodoo" strat,
below: my 1989 Squier Korea strat "The veteran"
I owned "The veteran" since 1991 and she's been my main guitar eversince. I changed EVERYTHING on her except for the body, she has a Wilkinson Vibrato, pickups from a mid eighties Fender japan strat and a Chinese made Humbucker which I bought for a fiver at the Frankfurt musicfair. I have no idea why this cheap chinese pickup sounds as good as it does but it does. The output of the humbucker isn't really that high so it mixes perfectly with the singlecoils and it retains its true Strat sound, while also being able to handle heavy distortion. Somebody asked me why I didn't make a proper body for it, seeing that it has a plywood body and I told them "You don't get it, the body, that's what gives that guitar the MOJO."
My mexican strat was more or less bought on a hunch, they were put on a bargain sale by the Musicstore in Cologne and I went there to actually check out Gibsons and seeing as every other strat I owned besides "The Veteran" was eventually sold on, I had little confidence in getting myself another strat. Knowing that I wouldn't keep it. But when I went for broke and actually played one my mind went "We like this." So I went to the counter and told them that I wanted to buy one of those reversed headstock strats, the guy went: "Sure thing, hold on a minute." I walked over to the Fender stand wanting to point out which particullar one I wanted to buy, but before I had the chance, the guy walks into the storage room, retrieves a large cardboard box with the Fender logo on it and said "Here you go sir, your guitar, gigbag is included." Luckily, the one he got me was actually much nicer than the one I wanted to buy. With this one, changing the pickups in favor for Dimarzio's and changing the floppy one layer white pickguard, for a black three layer one did it for me. That's when that white Mexican strat truly became MY guitar.
My two strats. Above: my 2007 Mexican made 68 classic series "Voodoo" strat,
below: my 1989 Squier Korea strat "The veteran"
I owned "The veteran" since 1991 and she's been my main guitar eversince. I changed EVERYTHING on her except for the body, she has a Wilkinson Vibrato, pickups from a mid eighties Fender japan strat and a Chinese made Humbucker which I bought for a fiver at the Frankfurt musicfair. I have no idea why this cheap chinese pickup sounds as good as it does but it does. The output of the humbucker isn't really that high so it mixes perfectly with the singlecoils and it retains its true Strat sound, while also being able to handle heavy distortion. Somebody asked me why I didn't make a proper body for it, seeing that it has a plywood body and I told them "You don't get it, the body, that's what gives that guitar the MOJO."
My mexican strat was more or less bought on a hunch, they were put on a bargain sale by the Musicstore in Cologne and I went there to actually check out Gibsons and seeing as every other strat I owned besides "The Veteran" was eventually sold on, I had little confidence in getting myself another strat. Knowing that I wouldn't keep it. But when I went for broke and actually played one my mind went "We like this." So I went to the counter and told them that I wanted to buy one of those reversed headstock strats, the guy went: "Sure thing, hold on a minute." I walked over to the Fender stand wanting to point out which particullar one I wanted to buy, but before I had the chance, the guy walks into the storage room, retrieves a large cardboard box with the Fender logo on it and said "Here you go sir, your guitar, gigbag is included." Luckily, the one he got me was actually much nicer than the one I wanted to buy. With this one, changing the pickups in favor for Dimarzio's and changing the floppy one layer white pickguard, for a black three layer one did it for me. That's when that white Mexican strat truly became MY guitar.
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