I agree with the above, wiring directly to the output jack will tell you if your pot is bad, that should be what you do first.
Next, I'd say try a different pickup if you feel up to it, I would definitely do that before trying to put in an OFR. I have a DXMG with all the original hardware, and this thing is a beast, it is one of, if not my best, sounding guitars, and I have other axes with OFR trems. Maybe I got a good one? I don't know...
I personally don't think swapping the tremolo will change much, I have a feeling they will sound relatively the same. And in my opinion a Big Block isn't necessarily better. Perhaps there is a problem with the saddles? Remove the strings and inspect the point where the strings make contact, if there are excessive burs or just a lot of random gunk that may be what is choking your sustain. However, I know you mentioned it sounds fine unplugged, so if it were a bridge/saddle problem it would probably sound muffled unplugged as well.
Another test you should do, raise the action really high (as in almost unplayably high), and pluck an open string. If the string rings out like normal, you know the hardware/wiring is good, and the frets may be the problem. If it is still muffled, you now know the hardware/wiring is the issue, and that the frets aren't the problem. This doesn't really get you anywhere I'll admit, but at this point you just need to isolate every component of the instrument until you can figure out what is wrong.
Keep us posted with more info, we all want your guitar to work!
Next, I'd say try a different pickup if you feel up to it, I would definitely do that before trying to put in an OFR. I have a DXMG with all the original hardware, and this thing is a beast, it is one of, if not my best, sounding guitars, and I have other axes with OFR trems. Maybe I got a good one? I don't know...
I personally don't think swapping the tremolo will change much, I have a feeling they will sound relatively the same. And in my opinion a Big Block isn't necessarily better. Perhaps there is a problem with the saddles? Remove the strings and inspect the point where the strings make contact, if there are excessive burs or just a lot of random gunk that may be what is choking your sustain. However, I know you mentioned it sounds fine unplugged, so if it were a bridge/saddle problem it would probably sound muffled unplugged as well.
Another test you should do, raise the action really high (as in almost unplayably high), and pluck an open string. If the string rings out like normal, you know the hardware/wiring is good, and the frets may be the problem. If it is still muffled, you now know the hardware/wiring is the issue, and that the frets aren't the problem. This doesn't really get you anywhere I'll admit, but at this point you just need to isolate every component of the instrument until you can figure out what is wrong.
Keep us posted with more info, we all want your guitar to work!
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