Does Anybody Here Know Someone At Fender...

Quick update: I spoke to the rep at the store where I bought them (Solo Music Gear) to see about a return or exchange and his reply, after checking another set and confirming with one of his techs, is that "it's by Fender's design". That's right: ALL Tex-Mex Tele Bridge Pickups now come standard with a very short (about 2") black wire lead.

Apparently, someone in Fender decided in their "infinite wisdom" that everybody should have just enough black lead to be able to either just get it under the bridge plate or, connect it to the pup cavity shield and then with another wire to the back of the volume pot. Or if the user is feeling adventurous enough, put their mind to work and splice some extra wire to reach the pot itself.

(sarcasm alert) Well, aren't we blessed that the bright executive minds at Fender were kind enough to keep our "widdle bwains" busy pondering all the possibilities that such a creative challenge presented??? Meh, too much credit given to them... Truth is, shorter wire lengths make for smaller costs. WIth the added bonus (for fender, of course) that if something happens to the pickup later in life, having spliced extra wire will void the warranty so you're SOL. And THAT is the Bottomline!!

Disclaimer: the preceding rant(s) have been mostly fuelled by a sewage backup caused by a blocked drain pipe and a stuck section of a plumber's drain snake trying to unclog it, all compounded by the city of Toronto's assessment that "the problem is in your segment of the drain, so it is your responsibility to fix (and pay for) it. Nyah, nyah". The rest of my motivation is just because I'm training for my curmudgeon years ahead...

So, anyway... I went ahead and spliced, soldered and shrink-tubed the heck out of the Fender travesti wire and turned into something useful.

Aaaaand... I'm spent!!. Pictures coming soon. ;)

Wow.

In addition to guitar players who are just trying to install some pickups, I feel sorry for the poor engineers at Fender who probably objected to this move but got overruled by the bureaucracy.
 
I understand what AMPMAD is saying here, and am a bit clueless on TX MX pups. Is this a specific use, Neck pup only and did you buy a 3 pup set where there is a Mid and Bridge specific pup as well and what is status of those wires? Full Length?

Maybe somebody chopped it off.
The factory wouldn't do that unless the engineers ordered it that way.

I don't believe this is a factory error.
We obviously do not have all the facts.

I also know that Fender has really good quality control, and that wouldn't go unnoticed.
Fender would not pack that and ship it unless there was a specific reason.

Where "is" this PU made anyway?
Does it say USA?
 
I understand what AMPMAD is saying here, and am a bit clueless on TX MX pups. Is this a specific use, Neck pup only and did you buy a 3 pup set where there is a Mid and Bridge specific pup as well and what is status of those wires? Full Length?
I bought a regular Tele Tex Mex set (Bridge and Neck). The teles that have the 3 Tex Mex Pickups I believe are the "Nashvilles". And that would be the tele set plus a tex-mex strat middle pup.
 
Like I said nothing wrong. It's just a different design.
I understand that, AMS. But maybe they also should update their hardcopy wiring diagrams included with the set, to more accurately reflect that specific wiring config as being the reason for the short lead. See below, case in point.
Fender Tex Mex Wiring Diagram.jpg

Ultimately, it gives the impression that the left hand is not talking to the right at fender, which makes them look bad, IMO.
 
Maybe somebody chopped it off.
The factory wouldn't do that unless the engineers ordered it that way.

I don't believe this is a factory error.
We obviously do not have all the facts.

I also know that Fender has really good quality control, and that wouldn't go unnoticed.
Fender would not pack that and ship it unless there was a specific reason.

Where "is" this PU made anyway?
Does it say USA?
It says "Made in Mexico", most likely by some poor overworked and underpaid (in mexican pesos, of course!) paisana or paisano that needs the sweatshop job desperately and doesn't dare question management, or in this case, QC...
 
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I understand that, AMS. But maybe they also should update their hardcopy wiring diagrams included with the set, to more accurately reflect that specific wiring config as being the reason for the short lead. See below, case in point.
View attachment 78400

Ultimately, it gives the impression that the left hand is not talking to the right at fender, which makes them look bad, IMO.

Just an educated guess, but I think the short black wire connects to the (shielding) ground lug.

blackwire.jpg
 
That suck, but that is the best rant I have seen in a while. It rare to see an informative yet entertaining rant.

Fender should be ashamed, then again if they know this is going on and wont correct it, then they wouldnt feel ashamed at all anyway.

I don't know. While lots of extra wire is great, I usually shorten leads and frequently lengthen them as required.
 
I have a brand new still in the box set of Tex-Mex pickups I bought 4 or 5 years ago, but never used. I just opened them up to see and yep, the bridge pickup has the short black wire.

A couple of years ago I bought a set of Pure Vintage 64s and the bridge pickup on those has a long normal black wire.
 
I have a brand new still in the box set of Tex-Mex pickups I bought 4 or 5 years ago, but never used. I just opened them up to see and yep, the bridge pickup has the short black wire.

A couple of years ago I bought a set of Pure Vintage 64s and the bridge pickup on those has a long normal black wire.
Makes me wonder... wonder, wonder... :notes:
 
Actually, It's only the Bridge pup that has the short wire. The neck has both long leads.

The thing that bugs me about that is that you are forced to use a “bridge” pickup in the bridge, unless you splice the wire. I’ve used “bridge” pickups in the neck position and an entirely different pickup in the bridge position on some projects.

Remember, originally there were no “bridge” or “neck” pickups. There were just pickups. Just because a pickup is labelled as a “bridge” pickup doesn’t mean you can’t get creative and use it in the neck. This goes for a Strat, too.
 
Not that in the general scheme of life does it matter…. My aftermarket pup set for my Strat had full length wires. Makes one wonder what Fender plans on doing with the 2 cents they save on each pup.


Up the price of their guitars...
 
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