Probably the AV Modified.
It'll be an American made reissue of the current Japanese reissue of the older Japanese reissue of the first American reissues of the Original American guitars.
https://www.fuzzfaced.net/american-deluxe-stratocaster.html
TTR is likely the Teal Green Transparent as you mentioned. I had a 99 in the transparent teal and grew to hate the color. Most of that was because I bought the guitar online and in the pics it looked like a mostly Blue guitar with a...
I actually really like the original headstock shape on the L6-S. If I do make my own there won't be much different appearance wise. I'd love it if it had a similar neck to my 61 reissue SG and I wouldn't bother with the rotary switch.
Agreed on all points except that my Les Paul is actually a Les Paul Custom Lite. With the thinner body I get most of the upper fret access & this neck seems to be made to fit my hand exactly.
In the 90s I had 77 L6-S. I loved the basic idea of the guitar but grew to hate it's baseball neck and...
If the guitar was painted solid, wood you care about the knot you couldn't see?
If that knot was at a major stress point (like the bridge studs or neck pocket, I might think different. Being where it is, I'd just play it.
I really like this color. Or shade a suppose.
IMO the straight up black pickguard is one of the lessor sexy matches. I always liked the Robert Cray in Inca with mint and I bet Tungsten is close enough for the same effect.
I'm going to try this Black Pearl first though because I think the dual...
Both will yellow but Nitro will do it more and faster.
I would be surprised if a Poly ever reached the undesirable color the OP wants to avoid but anything is possible.
Yes. It's a great pedal at any price.
It has very flexible settings, a nice warm vintage tube like tone and can be used with an external on/off switch so you can leave it on top of your amp to tweak settings.
With the effects set to minimum I've used it just as a Preamp to warm up tone.
I had...
@Herve10
This one.
Matching is tough but fortunately replacing these won't break the bank and you have the opportunity to do better than stock appearance wise.
Yeah, it doesn't hurt to know more, but if you already like what you have then it's really just for interest sake.
I agree with you on singles being super versatile. For Humbuckers I like Gibson 57 Classics. For a production pickup they are quite articulate and can cover a lot of musical...