T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1228.2 | I never saw one earlier than the '70s | ASHBY::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Thu Mar 23 1989 13:25 | 7 |
| I've owned several older strats & teles, all with maple fingerboards,
some with the stripe down the back & some without (seperate
fingerboard). None of them had that silver bullet truss rod adjuster
up at headstock - they all adjusted down by the base of the neck
(were you were sure to chew up the pickguard). Be that as it may,
I'm pretty sure that those silver gizmos didn't make their appearance
until sometime around the mid '70s - I just don't recall when.
|
1228.3 | Definitive answer | MOSAIC::WEBER | | Thu Mar 23 1989 14:10 | 1 |
| Late 1971-early 1972
|
1228.4 | Thank you! | ASHBY::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Thu Mar 23 1989 14:30 | 1 |
| That long ago, huh? My my, where DOES the time go? Thanks.
|
1228.5 | more info | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Thu Mar 23 1989 14:56 | 7 |
| I believe (and I'm sure Danny will correct me if I'm wrong)
that the introduction of bullet adjusters at the headstock
also coincides with the switch from 4 bolt to 3 bolt attachment
at the body. For vintage snobs, this is the final borderline
for "good ole strats".
/rick
|
1228.6 | Getting better all the time! | ASHBY::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Thu Mar 23 1989 15:11 | 2 |
| I do believe you're right - I almost forgot about that 'improvement'
|
1228.7 | What are they worth? | DIMMAK::BEFUMO | I chase the winds of a prism ship | Fri Mar 24 1989 08:16 | 3 |
| Can anyone comment on the value of one of the earlier strats of
this type? I'd guess the age at around '73 or so, sunburst finish,
maple neck, nice shape.
|
1228.8 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Fri Mar 24 1989 10:06 | 3 |
| I'd say about $400
/rick
|
1228.9 | more info, even though you didn't ask | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Fri Mar 24 1989 10:54 | 60 |
| Here's some more info on dating old Strats. In all
cases, the dates indicate during what year a feature
was introduced; combinations of both old and new
features always occured during that year as old parts
were used up. Also many vintage Strats on the market
now are Frankenstein creations of parts from different
periods.
1954 Strat introduced, one piece maple neck,
4 bolts, small headstock with "spaghetti"
logo, adjuster at heel, one layer Bakelite
pickguard with 8 screws, 4, 5, or 6 digit
serial number on heel plate, two color
sunburst finish. Strats were always
offered in tremelo and non-tremelo
versions.
1957 Custom colors introduced; the early
ones were Fiesta Red, Black, Olympic
White, and Blond.
1959 Neck changed to slab rosewood board on
maple, pickguard changed to 3 layer Celluloid
with 11 screws, sunbursts changed to 3 color.
"Slab" rosewood fingerboard means that
the underside was milled flat, making
the rosewood slightly thicker toward the
center of each fret position. Celluloid
pickguards oxidize with age and take on
a greenish or blueish tint.
1962 Neck changed to "curved" rosewood fingerboard,
where the underside of the rosewood follows
the top contour. Rumor has it that the change
was introduced because of problems with slab
boards separating on Fender basses.
1963 Pickguard screw on the upper bout between the
middle and rhythm pickups moved toward the middle
pickup (this is pretty obvious when you see it).
Serial numbers were restarted, 5 digits with an
"L" prefix. These were known as "L-series" Strats
1964 "Spaghetti" logo on the headstock changed to a thicker
"transition" logo.
1965 CBS officially buys Fender. Pickguard changed to
vinyl. Serial numbers were restarted, 6 digits
with a large "F" on the heel plate. Very late
in the year, a large headstock was introduced
This and the "F" plate are what usually distinguish
Post- from Pre-CBS Strats
1967 Maple cap fingerboard on maple neck optionally
available, logo changed to black, modern style.
1971 4-bolt necks changed to 3-bolt with bullet adjuster
at the nut. The end of the "vintage" Strats.
/rick
|
1228.10 | Everything you wanted to know . . . | ROLL::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Fri Mar 24 1989 11:11 | 2 |
| Thanks - everything I wanted to know about strats but was afraid
to ask!
|
1228.11 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Deeper in Debt | Fri Mar 24 1989 11:35 | 3 |
| Geeze I love my '75 strat, 3 bolt neck and all....
dbii
|
1228.12 | If it works it's enough! | ROLL::BEFUMO | Technical competence is the servant of creativity | Fri Mar 24 1989 15:36 | 3 |
| re [.-1] I guess if it holds the neck on it's enough! My hagstrom
Swede fastens the neck with 2 screws. I was really uneasy about
it at first, but it's been ten or so years now, and it's still there.
|
1228.13 | a 57? | KYOA::YATES | | Fri Mar 24 1989 16:17 | 11 |
|
I remember playing a strat that had a triangular neck.
I think it was a 57. Was that a characteristic of a
certain year? Or a custom neck?
thanks
tom
|
1228.14 | 57 sounds right | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Fri Mar 24 1989 16:36 | 7 |
| I believe 57 Strats generally had the most pronounced V shape,
but in truth you can find V necks from many different years,
including post-59 rosewood ones. In those days, necks were all
hand shaped and each person in the factory had his own way of doing
it.
/rick
|
1228.15 | Mystery Guitar...Heh..Heh...Heh | POBOX::KALLEVIGB | | Sun Apr 16 1989 02:14 | 16 |
| Ok Guys let's try this one...
My friend has a Strat: Black w/Maple neck and White Pick guard ser.
number V005795 with 4 bolt attachment and adjusting nut at base.
There is no specification of which country it was produced in.
It has Fender Synchronized tremolo. Tuning keys feed strings down
through center. Came with 3-way switch installed and a 5-way in
a accessory bag. Has a chrome 'plate' that can cover the tremolo.
Came in tweed case and booklet says it's modeled after '57 strat.
Any clues??
thanks in advance,
BJ
|
1228.16 | Gee - I actually might have answered a question here! | HAZEL::STARR | Like a fool, fell in love with you... | Sun Apr 16 1989 22:41 | 10 |
| re: -1
I'm not an expert, but this sounds *very* similar to my guitar, and I
believe it is the same model. Its a re-issue of the classic '57 Strat.
Fender introduced them about 5 years or so ago. I bought mine new at the
time for $649, and I think they sell for about $500 used nowadays.
Maybe someone could provide more info? (I just play 'em!)
Alan S.
|
1228.17 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | and let the purges begin | Mon Apr 17 1989 09:18 | 3 |
| Yep sounds like a '57 re-issue.
dbii
|
1228.18 | | POBOX::KALLEVIGB | | Mon Apr 17 1989 11:07 | 5 |
| Thanx, This thing is real light compared to the later models...
the neck is discolored. We do or don't know what year and country
this is from??
BJ
|
1228.19 | Proud To Be An American | AQUA::ROST | DWI,favorite pastime of the average guy | Tue Apr 18 1989 09:22 | 4 |
|
All "vintage reissue" models are U.S. made. The neck color is supposed
to be that way. I think it is meant to look "aged", but not having
been checking out Strats in 1957 8^) 8^) 8^) that's just a guess.
|
1228.20 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Tue Apr 18 1989 14:08 | 8 |
| The earliest vintage re-issues were actually made in Japan, but
none were ever officially sold in the US market, although a few
have found their way over here. If yours is one of these, it will
say "Made in Japan" somewhere on the headstock.
And of course, the Japanese re-issues are more collectible :-)
/rick
|
1228.21 | Is it really a strat? | BEATLE::STRANGE | Steve Strange | Thu Dec 28 1989 13:43 | 13 |
| I have a strat that has some big differences from most others I've
seen. The neck is rosewood, with a serial number E 3_____, which all
looks normal. But, there are only two knobs, volume and tone, and the
cord plugs in perpendicular to the pickguard. Also, the tremelo arm is
removeable by just pulling it off (just sort of snaps in). The handle
of the tremelo arm is all steel, unlike the newer strats I've seen with
the white plastic handle. There is no hole in the back of the body to
access the springs, you have to remove the pickguard, which I did last
night, revealing only three springs (and only three places for
springs). Is this a strat-copy body with a original strat neck, or
what? Thanks in advance for any info!!
Steve
|
1228.22 | yes, it really is... | PARITY::RANDERSON | | Fri Dec 29 1989 08:55 | 13 |
| I've got one just like it except mine has a maple neck. Bought it new
in 1983 and it's called the Fender Standard Strat. They had a higher
tech version that year also with push-pull volume and tone nobs, etc.,
that went for twice the price. If I remember correctly, Fender was
going through a reorg at the time and was trying to stimulate some more
demand for its products which hadn't seen any changes/innovations for a
few model years. They eventually have gone back to the three nob,
angled cord plug design for the Strat in the past few years.
Ron
|
1228.23 | Fender Loves To Use Old Names On New Products | AQUA::ROST | Everyone loves those dead presidents | Fri Dec 29 1989 09:10 | 17 |
|
Re: .21, .22
Ron is right, it's a "Standard" Strat that was the last ditch attempt
by CBS to compete price-wise with the Japanese. They did get the price
down by about $200 with the cost-cutting made possible by the cosmetic
changes. There were also Teles, P and J basses in the series, all with
similar cosmetic oddities. For those with more cash, they cointinued
the "Vintage" (reissue) and "Elite" (high-tech redesigns) lines.
Within two years, CBS sold Fender, all US production stopped for
awhile, and when it started up with the *current* "American Standard"
Strat, it was with the three knob, sunken jack, etc. setup. The Elite
line also sunk with CBS. Those instruments are real sleepers, very
versatile and selling for peanuts used.
Brian
|
1228.24 | | NEEPS::IRVINE | Never underestimate, the power of human stupidity | Tue Feb 06 1990 06:48 | 8 |
| Can anyone tell me the date of manufacture and place of manufacture
of the following Strat..
Black Strat S962316
Thanks Bob
|
1228.25 | Late 70's | CSC32::G_HOUSE | It's just a jump to the left... | Tue Feb 06 1990 12:20 | 10 |
| If I remember right (this is right off the top) the "S" series Strats
were US made in the late 70s.
I don't *think* that the Fender serial numbers have enough information
in them to be able to isolate the exact date of manufacture, but I
could be wrong on that.
I have an "S" series Strat too...
Greg
|
1228.26 | 1979 strat | 31793::MESENZEFF | Legalize Freedom | Tue Feb 06 1990 18:56 | 4 |
|
S9 + 5 digits = 1979 strat
Vic
|
1228.27 | 62 Strat without decals... | RTOIC::ACROY | OU812? | Fri Aug 23 1991 08:16 | 15 |
| Hi,
I have a Strat from Nov./Dec 62: Three color sunburst, rosewood
fingerboard, Kluson tuners, "greenish" pickguard, 3way switch - really
all original and in very good shape...
The only problem I have with it: sometime back in the seventies the
neck has been refinished . and the fool who did it (wet?)sanded the
upper side of the headstock and so all the original decals are gone:
Fender logo with Pat numbers and the little round one, saying
"contoured body".
Who has an idea where I could get those decals?
sascha
|
1228.28 | | LEDS::BURATI | Fender Bender | Fri Aug 23 1991 20:49 | 13 |
| I've seen an ad in the back of Guitar World magazine advertizing
Fender Decals. Can't recall too much about it, though. It was just
a little classified ad. Might have been in Guitar Player. Vintage
dealers know where you can get them. Some sell them themselves. They
use them to restore instruments. Reputable dealers will want to be
convinced that you are buying it for an actual Fender instrument.
Close-up photos showing lots of detail including the logoless head-
stock. Be sure you say that you want it for a '62 Stratocaster, as
there have been many different logos, various patent numbers, etc.
I paid $20 for one, but the dealer said he was having a hard time
getting them and didn't know if he could get more. Of course, after
that I saw the ad, so maybe they aren't hard to get now. Good luck.
-ron
|
1228.29 | | RTOIC::ACROY | OU812? | Mon Aug 26 1991 08:22 | 5 |
| Thank you Ron,
tonight I'll try to find that ad in GP/GW.
sascha
|