ttosh
New member
Can anybody give me any input as to why spend more on an American made version? They seem to be spec'd the same for the most part. And the cost is quite a bit more for the American.
Mudder":7d82a said:The quality control is more consistent, the pickups are US instead of Tex Mex, the wood is a bit better.
That's not to say you can't find a great Mex Strat, you just have to look harder.
Cheaper yet and a great guitar are the Xavier strat copies from Guitar Fetish. I have one of the blems ($225) and can't find anything wrong with it. Great guitar.
Mudder":fd674 said:I would compare the poplar in my guitar to sound very similar to a basswood body. It is real light, has a nice midrange, not so much "twang" or "spank", a real good rock music guitar.
The neck is 21 frets, I would guess about a 10" radius, it seems a bit flatter than a regular strat neck. Fretwork is very good and the neck is very close to a Japanese strat for thickness. I actually installed a Jap strat neck and found they play almost the same but the strat has a thicker heel in the pocket so you have to completely redo your setup. It's not a straight swap. I ended up going back to the factory neck because of 3 things, better frets, graphtec nut, wilkenson tuners.
dave_mc":407ff said:^ that's your answer to everything...
Specially the Dimarzio ones, nitro finish ftwCode001":1cd13 said::|::QBB:dave_mc":1cd13 said:^ that's your answer to everything...
I was actually being serious though. The Japanese are the best strats for the money, IMO.