New pickups are in, waiting to finish the soldering. I thought I hated working with strats, but telecaster pickups, especially the bridge, are really fragile with those 2 coil wires being so close to the springs. I was relieved that there was still continuity from pickups after I put them in. Couldn't anyone come up with a thin layer of something to protect those?
It was also nice that an Oak Grigsby style switch fits the control plate and has enough depth to go in. I was really worried that it wouldn't fit, but after bending the terminals a bit there's almost a 1/4" clearance there. The switch tip doesn't fit but I will just file the switch arm a little and make it fit.
Also the knobs I wanted to use didn't fit CTS knurling, good thing I have set-screw knobs I can use which I also like. Oh, well, it's all part of the sport.
Squier Bullet FSR Tele upgrades (from Page 2)
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Glossed up the fretboard and headstock - some light sanding with a 4-sided soft manicure file followed with 3 coats of TruOil. My lack of photo skills can't quite capture how well it turned out, I didn't even expect such results. The "wet" look of oil finish makes the wood grain "deep" and 3-dimensional, so even with mild figuring it becomes very pleasant to look at.
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I don't know Fender spec, but while the neck was out I took a quick measure. I feel it's a bit easier for me to deal in metric units, especially with small fractions, but Google will help you convert if needed. I hope this helps. And I hope I didn't need to measure where the screw holes are, I imagine that tends to be specific to each neck or something like that.
The depth measurements are from the body top (not pickguard) and I took them at the treble/bridge corner and at the bass/neck corner.
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Yeah, people have been putting fender-spec necks like warmoth on squiers for as long as all those brands have existed. For me, I never wanted to do that - it gets expensive. Modding cheap guitars is a sport and fun. But the end game is getting a good guitar for cheap. If I wanted a good guitar for not so cheap, I'd just look for the option that gets me there without mods. The process can be nerve-wrecking as it is
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Somehow I managed to finish soldering and everything appears to work and not noisy or scratchy so far. My (no doubt) atrocious soldering job pictured below. I really do hate soldering (it's probably easier with all the right tools and a good workstation). But I can't imagine paying a "tech" what it would cost. I hope I didn't end up with any cold joints. I kept checking everything for continuity and physical strength, had to reheat some of the points a few times to get good saturation.
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It was a gloomy day today and I didn't like the photos under indoor lighting. So maybe tomorrow. But everything is working and sounds great. The GFS "vintage repro" pickups are definitely a lot more musical vs. the stock and not even a hint of a mismatch in output despite the bridge pickup having a much lower DCR. I went with "vintage wiring" (where the tone connects to the volume's output, not input lug). I'm not sure if I'm picking up a lot of difference specifically due to that, but I find with these pickups the tone knob has more useable range. And I rarely do bridge pickup alone on any guitar, but it sounds pretty nice, no harshness or brashness even with fully open tone. But a bit more hum/noise than I was expecting, so may have to stick with the middle position. Or it could just be where the amp stands right now.
Just a couple of pics of the headstock. For now I decided to just let the UV eventually tint the neck. I've been leaving it in front of a window (it's not really exposed to heat, only the light).
Also forgot to mention: the obligatory black Graphtech nut. I think it's a much better look than white plastic on this one
Just a couple of pics of the headstock. For now I decided to just let the UV eventually tint the neck. I've been leaving it in front of a window (it's not really exposed to heat, only the light).
Also forgot to mention: the obligatory black Graphtech nut. I think it's a much better look than white plastic on this one