Sunday, March 07, 2021
RCE HSS Solidbody Overhaul
Monday, November 02, 2020
Mymozika Frankenstrat Build | Part Four
Part One | Part Two | Part Three | Part Four
After eight months, the Mymozika Frankenstrat is finally ready. Having finalized the position of the bridge and body-mounted hardware, the control cavity was shielded with conductive shielding paint. Once the paint was dry and the grounding tab screwed in, I was able to wrap up the wiring end of things.
Meanwhile, there was the issue of the gnarly satin finish on the fretboard, back of neck; and headstock. To protect it while in transit, someone had wrapped this beautiful Canadian hard rock maple neck tightly in plastic cling film. As a result of this, the thin finish had crinkled up and developed unsightly lines.
I'd actually put off dealing with this problem until the very last; as just looking at the damage made me very depressed. Thank goodness a few hours of gentle buffing with 0000 steel wool got rid of most of the lines and smoothened out the finish somewhat. Following this, the whole neck was waxed and buffed.
One interesting feature of this neck is that it sports a vintage 7.25" radius. Based upon the size of the frets, I was expecting the radius to be at least 9.5". In any case, after stringing the Mymozika with Ernie Ball 10s; a routine setup was carried out. Now, what does this Frankenstrat sound like? Ballsy and full of stratty spank, methinks. If you're curious, do check out these two YouTube videos: Mymozika Frankenstrat - Clean Tones and Mymozika Frankenstrat - Overdrive.
It's been a long and bumpy ride, but well worth it. Never thought that those Japanese Fender pickups would work so well with the Fender SCN ST-BR (albeit after some rewiring); but they do. That about wraps it up for this Mymozika Frankenstrat Build. Thanks for dropping by. As always, stay safe, stay healthy; and God bless :)
Note: Fender®, Stratocaster®, Strat®, Telecaster®, Tele®, P Bass®,
Precision Bass®, and the distinctive headstock designs of these guitars
are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation.
Thursday, October 15, 2020
1981 Ibanez Blazer BL-400: Part Three
Quick Links: Part One | Part Two | Part Three | Part Four
In this third instalment on a droolicious Ibanez BL-400, let's take a look at what was done electronics-wise. Now, as the guitar was unshielded save for some foil underneath the pickguard; a full shielding was installed utilizing conductive shielding paint, aluminium foil and a grounding tab.
The wires emanating from the Super 6 pickups themselves looked a tad iffy. Seems like someone had taken a soldering iron to them somewhere along the line and left a sloppy mess of solder blobs, loosely-hanging leads and burnt insulation. The only remedy, then; would be to desolder, clean up the leads, and resolder them to the flatwork.
All the control cavity components were replaced, save for the Switchcraft #11 jack which was in immaculate shape. Nothing out of the ordinary: Alpha A500K pots, Gotoh DM-50 selector switch, NKK DPDT toggle switch; and Russian K40Y-7 0.033uF tone cap.
Wednesday, September 02, 2020
2010 American Special Stratocaster® | Part 2
Stratocaster Taken Apart
Thursday, July 30, 2020
Yamaha ERG121C Makeover: Part Two
Following this, the pickups and electronics were installed. Now, since a complete rewire was on the cards, I decided to do a minor upgrade and put in a Russian K73-16 0.022uF tone cap, Gavitt cloth-covered pushback wire for short runs; and Gavitt single-conductor braided shield wire from the volume pot to the output jack. I felt that it was only fitting as the owner had already spent his hard-earned money on bona fide Seymour Duncan pickups, CTS 500K pots, CRL 5-way switch; and Switchcraft #11 jack.
As I type this the rewiring's been completed, tested; and everything checks out okay. What's left is to reattach the neck, string her up with 10s; and do a complete setup. Do stay tuned for updates on this Yamaha ERG121C. Till we meet again in cyberspace, stay home, stay safe; and avoid crowded spaces.
Monday, May 11, 2020
Jackson JS30 Dinky Gets Some Love
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