djw
Well-known member
I had a kind of a random thought the other day.
So, you know I'm a tweaker. In the last year, having pretty much settled on my LSC's tweak-state, I've been tweaking my guitars.
The most recent additions to the family are my two Fenders -- an American Standard Tele, and an American Deluxe Strat -- and as they are the two I take to shows nowadays, I've been intent on getting them ship-shape. Same story as the LSC, in a way: they were pretty great as-is, but... geez, if I just make this change, it'll be that much better. So: new pickups, new innards, and most recently: new bridges.
I should have started with the bridges, because they've actually made the biggest difference in both guitars. The electronic upgrades were cool, and definitely the pickups were an improvement... but improving the steel connecting the strings to the body really, really sweetened things up. In both cases I went with a Callaham upgrade: first the Strat got the Deluxe replacement block, saddles and springs; then the Tele got the Standard replacement 3-brass saddle bridge plate.
I was going to leave the Tele's bridge stock because it sounded pretty good as-is. But the one complaint I had was that compared to the Strat, which sounds crystal clear and responds like a piano since it got that new block, I noticed my Tele had a tendency to bottom out. The highs were nice and clear, but no matter how much I lowered the pickups on the bass side, notes on the low E tended to just poop out. Loss of definition, especially down low (I use D'Addario 11-49, so decently heavy strings). Funf-funf-funf.
Sound familiar?
So I swapped the Tele's bridge, and now it's all clear and tight down low, but it also got me thinking: is it possible that some of the mud that I was hearing in my Lone Star wasn't necessarily a result of inherent muddy amp performance, but at least partly -- maybe mostly -- an accurate translation of what the amp got from the guitar?
I know one big selling point for me was the amp's advertised ability to preserve the guitar's character whether it was in crystal-clear or high-gain mode.
I'm not disavowing the mod ideas, and I'm glad I've spent all this time fuggin with my amp... but it's interesting. I wonder, how many of us have really kick-*** guitars out there? Anyone else feel like the hardware on their axes is maybe sub-par? Swapping bridges is definitely more expensive than either of the Reeder mods, so it's possible the mods are more efficient mud-cutting techniques... but it kinda makes me wonder what it would sound like for me to plug my Strat into a stock LSC and hear the difference.
So, ah... Discuss. :lol:
So, you know I'm a tweaker. In the last year, having pretty much settled on my LSC's tweak-state, I've been tweaking my guitars.
The most recent additions to the family are my two Fenders -- an American Standard Tele, and an American Deluxe Strat -- and as they are the two I take to shows nowadays, I've been intent on getting them ship-shape. Same story as the LSC, in a way: they were pretty great as-is, but... geez, if I just make this change, it'll be that much better. So: new pickups, new innards, and most recently: new bridges.
I should have started with the bridges, because they've actually made the biggest difference in both guitars. The electronic upgrades were cool, and definitely the pickups were an improvement... but improving the steel connecting the strings to the body really, really sweetened things up. In both cases I went with a Callaham upgrade: first the Strat got the Deluxe replacement block, saddles and springs; then the Tele got the Standard replacement 3-brass saddle bridge plate.
I was going to leave the Tele's bridge stock because it sounded pretty good as-is. But the one complaint I had was that compared to the Strat, which sounds crystal clear and responds like a piano since it got that new block, I noticed my Tele had a tendency to bottom out. The highs were nice and clear, but no matter how much I lowered the pickups on the bass side, notes on the low E tended to just poop out. Loss of definition, especially down low (I use D'Addario 11-49, so decently heavy strings). Funf-funf-funf.
Sound familiar?
So I swapped the Tele's bridge, and now it's all clear and tight down low, but it also got me thinking: is it possible that some of the mud that I was hearing in my Lone Star wasn't necessarily a result of inherent muddy amp performance, but at least partly -- maybe mostly -- an accurate translation of what the amp got from the guitar?
I know one big selling point for me was the amp's advertised ability to preserve the guitar's character whether it was in crystal-clear or high-gain mode.
I'm not disavowing the mod ideas, and I'm glad I've spent all this time fuggin with my amp... but it's interesting. I wonder, how many of us have really kick-*** guitars out there? Anyone else feel like the hardware on their axes is maybe sub-par? Swapping bridges is definitely more expensive than either of the Reeder mods, so it's possible the mods are more efficient mud-cutting techniques... but it kinda makes me wonder what it would sound like for me to plug my Strat into a stock LSC and hear the difference.
So, ah... Discuss. :lol: