1987 Squirecaster 2.0 Thread:

I've put humbuckers in this guitar starting around maybe 1998, when I crudely hand-routed the bridge pickup cavity with a 3/8" drill and a burr.

I've probably had at least 10 different pickup combinations in this guitar (just my personal ones) since then and I've used it just to test pickguards that I've put together for other people.

However, nothing ever grabbed me. The Stratocaster sat around and was played by students and banged on by visiting kids. Most of its lifetime, it was used in Mom's recording studio with DiMarzio Stacked Single Coils.

This most recent set of modificationd are totally different.

First of all, reconfiguring the fretboard to a 12" radius was a huge plus in terms of feel, playing comfort and dexterity. The tiny vintage fretwire was cut down and crowned to about .035" off the board. The neck feels almost fruitless, which was how it felt after 29 years and multiple fret levels, so after changing the radius, I went back and recreated this "worn out" feel.

The tone rivals both my Gibson's in terms of presence and bite and it actually has a bigger, fuller tone than even my Gibson Les Paul.

Other than the wire harness, which I made by hand from scratch, the pickups are pure junk. Two broken Gibson humbuckers I got off reverb that needed new leads, broken solder connections, stripped pole pieces and a section of copper strand severed by an errant screwdriver tip.

When I contacted the seller and told him/shared photos of what I encountered, he was super supportive. We worked out a nice deal and on top of making an online friend, he sent me a full set of 50 year old Ken-Rad T12AX7 tubes.

So, stripping off some damaged copper strand and rejoining the ends of the tiny conductors, was tedious, but gave me unbalanced coils. Soldering the base plate holes up and tapping them fixed the pole piece issues. Magnets were swapped, new 2 conductor leads were soldered in, some wax potting (light not submerged around the soldered repairs) was done and the coils were wrapped first with paper tape and then with the correct fluted fabric.

Something about these pickups is somewhat magical in nature. Ive never had a tone quite like this. Converting a 3 ceramic magnet Gibson 500T to a single Alnico 4 with wood spacers, really did give this a very unique voicing. The 496R also blends very well.

Both pickups have pole pieces set to the 12" string radius and both pickup heights are set to 4/32" and their output is perfectly matched.

The CTS TAOT pots feel really firm and smooth and measured out at 550/560k. The unglamorous .022uf Orange Drops seem to be doing the job, but my thoughts are a future switch to .015uf bridge and 0.01uf neck for more fine tone control.

The guitar just has a worn in pair of shoes feel.

Walk into a Guitar Center and plug straight into an amp and everyone will ask what effects you are running!!! Pull any Gibson off the wall and the Stratocaster sounds bigger. It's that unique.

I know there are Strat purists who would balk, but I've been able to blend two guitars together, something I have long been told wasn't possible. Even I am baffled that the scale length tonal signature has been effectively Gibson-ized.

Probably the best part of this is I play this thing flat out. I'm not apprehensive of someone wanting to pick it up or knock it over.

Its ugly, but its an amazing tool...

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Ok, so with the new band, I don't play anything but heavy rock/metal, so I never think about 'clean tones' or any of that. My goal - with this Stratocaster project - was to create a tone as similar as possible to my Gibson SG so that i could effectively swap guitars without re-EQ'ing the amplifiers. When I started this project, the 3 guitars sounded as different as night and day. The Von Herndon Double Neck was so dark and muddy (six string side only) that it had to be externally EQ'd with a Boss GE-7 just to be able to clean it up. The Stratocaster, with a DiMarzio Virtual Vintage Solo (10kΩ) didn't produce enough gain and presence to make it a contender and it still retained that 'Quackiness' that really made it sound out of place.

Now, I am working on a instrumental to a backing track as a side project that will allow you to hear a milder tone from the Stratocaster, but for now, I have collected sound samples from each of my 3 guitars, played through the same Blackstar ID-Core 100 Watt Solid State Amp with the same preset saved. The tracks were recorded between 10/22/2018 and 10/25/2018. There are some differences in playback volume on these tracks, but the basic EQ and gain remain unchanged. I seem to have more 'white noise' with the Kevin Taylor Erupter in the VH Double Neck, although all guitars are equally shielded. All guitars are running 180° out-of-phase, so what you hear are both bridge and neck pickups running simultaneously.

I am playing part of Ozzy's 'Flyin' High Again' and while I do not play the phrase exactly the same each time, at least you can hear the guitars playing over a very similar phrase


Here are the three guitars for you to enjoy - or loathe - for their tone:

Von Herndon Doubleneck: Kevin Taylor Erupter / Alnico II / 9.6kΩ Bridge - Thro-Bak SLE-101 / Alnico V / 7.6kΩ

Von Herndon Double Neck with Kevin Taylor Bridge and Thro-Bak SLE-101 Out-Of-Phase

1987 Squire Stratocaster: Gibson 500T (Modified) / Alnico IV / 14.6kΩ - Gibson 496R (Modified) / Alnico V / 8.6kΩ

1987 Stratocaster with Gibson 500T & 496R Pickups

2016 Gibson SG: Gibson 57 Classic + / Alnico II / 9.6kΩ - Gibson Burstbucker Pro / Alnico V / 8.4kΩ

2016 Gibson SG Gibson 57 Classic + & Burstbucker Pro 180 Out-Of-Phase

In a live setting, you would not be able to really tell these guitars apart, but the SG wins the 'chainsaw' award, IMHO... :)

The Gibson SG is built to the specs I got from Grover Jackson and Seymour Duncan's notes and the recent physical inspection of Randy's two Jackson guitars. My SG is essentially a clone of Randy's White Jackson Concorde, minus the push/pull phase switches.

STRATOCASTER STRING DISCLAIMER: I thought it was worth mentioning that the strings on the Stratocaster are well over a year old and it has a recently replaced (3 or 4 months back) wound 'g' string, so I am sure a new set of strings will improve it's tone dramatically...

@ivan H , @smitty_p - have you heard the tone comparisons yet???
 
Although this guitar is awesome and tonally fits the bill, i notice all the limitations of the Fender scale length in terms of feel, string tension, string proximity to the edges of the neck and fret to fret spacing.

This needs a 24.75" Warmoth Neck.

I can build one from Mahogany with an ebony board, Les Paul Custom block inlay, 1-11/16" wide with fat 50's style profile for under $400.00

That's in the works...
 
Found a great balance between Gibson feel and the string feel on my 1987 Stratocaster.

The Gibson's are all strung 46/36/26/16/11/9

Today between recording takes, I strung my Stratocaster 46/36/26/15/10/8

Feels just like my Gibson's and no more string tension variations.
 
Say Robert, you ever tried the 9.5 44 strings..?..I use Throbak's Pure Nickel round core 9.5 44's strings on my LP and their nice..they feel like 9's...

My favorite strings are the D'addario NYXL's though.. i was a long time ernie Ball user till I tried these..expensive but worth it..anyway, I just recently saw that they make a 9.5 44..im gonna have to check 'em out...but dig this, then I'd need to buy the 9 46 pack too because I like 46's..ha,ha...I think the perfect combo would be 9.5 46..it's a weird gauge I know..but 10's bug me..they used to not but as I get older, it's getting tougher to do bends and stuff..

Nice Fender Squire by the way..Love it..!!!....when I first started playing I used 8's but just couldn't stop breaking them..but it's been 30 yrs since then..it might be different now..
 
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Say Robert, you ever tried the 9.5 44 strings..?..I use Throbak's Pure Nickel round core 9.5 44's strings on my LP and their nice..they feel like 9's...

My favorite strings are the D'addario NYXL's though.. i was a long time ernie Ball user till I tried these..expensive but worth it..anyway, I just recently saw that they make a 9.5 44..im gonna have to check 'em out...but dig this, then I'd need to buy the 9 46 pack too because I like 46's..ha,ha...I think the perfect combo would be 9.5 46..it's a weird gauge I know..but 10's bug me..they used to not but as I get older, it's getting tougher to do bends and stuff..

Nice Fender Squire by the way..Love it..!!!....when I first started playing I used 8's but just couldn't stop breaking them..but it's been 30 yrs since then..it might be different now..

You know...I haven't really branched out much and I am still using Ernie Balls!!!!!

But I agree...everything I have is string .046"/.036/.026"!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
So, I am contemplating going back to the vintage DiMarzios (DP404/DP217/DP117) to satisfy the need for single coils on some recording projects....

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