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Sheepdog1969

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I have never owned a Stratocaster. The only "Fender" I have is a tiny Starcaster Strat, which a friend bought for my daughter when she was born. She never wanted to learn to play, so she gave it to me. Despite it being "set-up" and somewhat playable, it is more of a curiosity and rarely gets touched. I do own a '96 US made G&L Legacy HSS, which plays great and is "Strat-esque".  But, even with it's coil-split switch for the bridge Seymour Duncan Humbucker, it fails to produce the complete single coil tone that a SSS strat can. Don't get me wrong, the neck and middle SD single coils meet and exceed all my tonal expectations, and the Humbucker truly delivers in the double coil mode, (and is adequate in the single coil mode.).  However, I eventually wanted a SSS Fender strat, which would provide it's unique tonal offering, that was absent in my current collection. 

My daughter turned 18 on Dec. 1st, and being a good dad with a great daughter, I spent a good bit of money on her big day. She is also heading off to the University of Alabama's Aerospace Engineering school next fall, and her tuition/housing costs (which I will be paying) are beginning now.  With Christmas fast approaching, the last thing I was considering was buying another guitar. That was until Fender sent me an offer on a Limited Edition Squier Sonic Stratocaster HT for $126.00 + tax and free shipping. Yup, nothing is more tempting than a urine yellow, poplar bodied, ceramic single coiled, hardtail, base model Squier "Strat", manufactured with parts and labor costs below $126.00 US per unit. But hey, it does say Fender on the headstock, albeit in tiny print below the large "Squier" logo. It was in my hands 3 days after I inexplicably clicked the "submit order" button.

After 4+ hours of filing/polishing every fret end, 2 hours of action and intonation adjustments, 1 hour of pickup height adjustments, and 30 minutes removing the factory "9's" and restringing it with Ernie Ball "Fat Bottoms, Skinny Tops", I had a guitar that played great and sounded pretty good, (as long as I left the bridge p/u out of the mix).  I just ordered a loaded pickguard with new Fender Tex-Mex single coils, for just over what the guitar cost, and I plan to have them in before the New Year.

https://www.fender.com/en-US/squier-series/squier-sonic/?prefn1=refinement-color&prefv1=Yellow&start=0&sz=12

0goplW3.jpg

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I just bought a bright lime green Squier Esquire for $139 shipped. Pretty amazing guitar for the money. I get what you’re saying about typically needing to spend a good amount of time polishing the frets but I find it to be hit or miss. I won’t need to do much to this one but a Squier Jazzmaster I bought last year had frets that were not only razor sharp but looked like they had been sanded with 240 grit. Luck of the draw. G51W53m.jpg

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I played an American Standard mid/late 90's Strat for a few years. Loved it. It sounded thinner than my Gibsons, but surely had it's place on many occasions. Eventually sold it, but I still own a Tele.

Never owned a Squier, but I knew a guy who gigged all over Nashville with an Epiphone Les Paul that he'd tinkered with. This guy could afford a real one, but he loved that darned Epi until he died. Good picker, too.

If the scale and intonation are correct you can make any guitar work.

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1 hour ago, ksdaddy said:

I just bought a bright lime green Squier Esquire for $139 shipped. Pretty amazing guitar for the money. I get what you’re saying about typically needing to spend a good amount of time polishing the frets but I find it to be hit or miss. I won’t need to do much to this one but a Squier Jazzmaster I bought last year had frets that were not only razor sharp but looked like they had been sanded with 240 grit. Luck of the draw. 

What are you doing with them? 

Hot-rodding and flipping?

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7 hours ago, Pinch said:

Nice. I've never played a Squier but I've played many MIM Fenders (all have been excellent) and Squiers are made in Mexico too, right?

I've always been impressed by Fender's Mexican output.

Per the back of the headstock, my Squier was "crafted" in Indonesia.

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11 hours ago, Sheepdog1969 said:

I have never owned a Stratocaster. The only "Fender" I have is a tiny Starcaster Strat, which a friend bought for my daughter when she was born. She never wanted to learn to play, so she gave it to me. Despite it being "set-up" and somewhat playable, it is more of a curiosity and rarely gets touched. I do own a '96 US made G&L Legacy HSS, which plays great and is "Strat-esque".  But, even with it's coil-split switch for the bridge Seymour Duncan Humbucker, it fails to produce the complete single coil tone that a SSS strat can. Don't get me wrong, the neck and middle SD single coils meet and exceed all my tonal expectations, and the Humbucker truly delivers in the double coil mode, (and is adequate in the single coil mode.).  However, I eventually wanted a SSS Fender strat, which would provide it's unique tonal offering, that was absent in my current collection. 

My daughter turned 18 on Dec. 1st, and being a good dad with a great daughter, I spent a good bit of money on her big day. She is also heading off to the University of Alabama's Aerospace Engineering school next fall, and her tuition/housing costs (which I will be paying) are beginning now.  With Christmas fast approaching, the last thing I was considering was buying another guitar. That was until Fender sent me an offer on a Limited Edition Squier Sonic Stratocaster HT for $126.00 + tax and free shipping. Yup, nothing is more tempting than a urine yellow, poplar bodied, ceramic single coiled, hardtail, base model Squier "Strat", manufactured with parts and labor costs below $126.00 US per unit. But hey, it does say Fender on the headstock, albeit in tiny print below the large "Squier" logo. It was in my hands 3 days after I inexplicably clicked the "submit order" button.

After 4+ hours of filing/polishing every fret end, 2 hours of action and intonation adjustments, 1 hour of pickup height adjustments, and 30 minutes removing the factory "9's" and restringing it with Ernie Ball "Fat Bottoms, Skinny Tops", I had a guitar that played great and sounded pretty good, (as long as I left the bridge p/u out of the mix).  I just ordered a loaded pickguard with new Fender Tex-Mex single coils, for just over what the guitar cost, and I plan to have them in before the New Year.

https://www.fender.com/en-US/squier-series/squier-sonic/?prefn1=refinement-color&prefv1=Yellow&start=0&sz=12

0goplW3.jpg

Cool color, I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen another guitar colored like that.

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6 hours ago, ksdaddy said:

I just bought a bright lime green Squier Esquire for $139 shipped. Pretty amazing guitar for the money. I get what you’re saying about typically needing to spend a good amount of time polishing the frets but I find it to be hit or miss. I won’t need to do much to this one but a Squier Jazzmaster I bought last year had frets that were not only razor sharp but looked like they had been sanded with 240 grit. Luck of the draw. G51W53m.jpg

I like the color of this one too, I guess I’m tired of all the standard colors of guitars these days.

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Nice score! My parts-caster has a Squier neck and it's very comfortable, I've grown to love maple fretboards. The 9.5 radius feels a little odd to me still. It's good up to the 7th fret but then after that I miss the flatter radiuses of my other guitars. 

I love being able to play something different every once in awhile, but some guitars just feel like home.

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19 minutes ago, Mr. Gibson said:

I like the color of this one too, I guess I’m tired of all the standard colors of guitars these days.

Sometimes I hope for a cheap but decent solid body to show up so I can paint it some crazy color.  Specifically one that had already been butchered. I would question “restoring” a 15 year old Affinity but I would have no qualms about picking up some rattle cans in an obnoxious color. Fender beat me to it this time. 
 

I like my Fenders made in California but when they can crank something GOOD out like this on the cheap, and it makes a kid (or adult) pick up a guitar, then I don’t care where it came from. This is SO much better than some of the entry level trash I encountered in the 70s. 

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On 12/21/2023 at 4:12 PM, Sheepdog1969 said:

Per the back of the headstock, my Squier was "crafted" in Indonesia.

Yes, I recall they 'craft' in Indonesia. My Rics & Gibsons are 'made' in the USA, my PRS SE was 'built' in Korea., my Fingerbone is 'handmade' in England. So far I've never found any country that 'fashions' a guitar. Not yet anyway.

 

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Yellow is my favorite color for a strat. My dad used to have an old 80s or 90s strat in “graffiti yellow” and I loved the way it looked. 
 

I ordered this body from warmoth and had it and a neck finished by a forum member from here who I haven’t seen in a long time. It has a warmoth neck but I ended up putting this neck from an old American deluxe strat on it 

 

I get bonus tone points from my iconic wiring under the hood

 

bq7lLzY.jpg

JNJEdv3.jpeg

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