Tuesday, March 17, 2009

On the work table (Strat)

Here is a I guitar I made this weekend to use up all the spare parts I had lying around my music room. The spare parts I had were: 1) a Mighty Mite maple Strat neck; 2) some really old Music Man tuners; 3) a pair of Gibson burstbuckers that someone gave me after I wired up his Duncans in his Les Paul; and 4) an old white Strat pickguard.

To make the guitar complete, I picked up a Strat body with a Floyd Rose on eBay for $79. Peeking in the neck pocket it appears to be a nice solid piece of wood and by the weight I'm guessing alder. I also had to buy a set of bushing adapters for the tuners (these were the smaller diameter tuners and the neck was drilled for bigger tuners), and a Gotoh locking nut on eBay. I mistakenly bought a lock nut without the cutout on the bottom for the truss rod, so I had to buy another one. Damn, now I have an extra locknut..... I guess I gotta start another project. Finally I had an extra 500k pot from the guitar I'm fixing up for my niece-in-law, so I used that as well.

Here's the guitar on the workdesk:



Here it is all put together:



A couple of issues - I need to work on the nut shelf a little more. I routed it by hand, but it could be a little lower. I also need to adjust the intonation. But the wiring is perfect and it sounds killer. I may scallop the fretboard. I thought of doing an EVH paintjob, but since the Floyd is recessed and there's a neck humbucker, it ruins the authenticity. On the other hand, since EVH now plays with a recessed Floyd and a neck humbucker, this could be a hybrid of sorts. Yes, I am a guitar nerd.

I like the ghetto looks. I'm sure it would look "nicer" with a pickguard, but that's not what I'm going for. I'm going for the EVH just put it together and play it vibe.

Also, that white stuff around the pickups are paper towels. I stuffed em in there to stabilize the pickups since I haven't mounted them yet. Direct mounting pickups is tricky. When they're mounted to a mounting ring, you want to make sure the screws are attached to the bracket. But direct mounted, you have to ream out the holes so it moves freely (a foam pad underneath the pickup will push it up). I'm not 100% convinced that I want to destroy the threading in the pickups for this project, so right now they are temporarily mounted. Once I work on the nut and can make this a killer player, I will also commit to the pickups.

Oh yeah, and the pickguard is black because of duct tape. For me, two humbuckers, a volume control and a pickup selector are all I need. These buckers were easy to install because they're the single conductor type with the braided shielding.

All in all, a really great guitar and a relatively cheap way to use up all my spare parts.

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