Felt that urge to wetsand (which hardly ever happens) so I went at this project.
20160903_092927 by
Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr
Then I worked on the electronics. This guitar is funny because the whole electronic section is attached to the guard. LOL I was able to test my wiring without the body.
20160903_103135 by
Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr
Then I got the guard on the body and mounted the tremolo. The tremolo design is kind of a pain since it mounts on the guard to the body.
20160903_104720 by
Christopher Louck, on Flickr
Got the neck and knobs on. Glad I got these vintage brass knobs. They look cool. I decided where I wanted the strap buttons. The lower one was kind of a no brainer, but the other one I put as close to the neck as the angle would allow. I didn't want it sticking out of the back of the body or behind the neck since I use straplocks.
20160903_111356 by
Christopher Louck, on Flickr
Put some strings on and found out the tremolo causes HORRIBLE string break angle. It was basically going flat over the mustang bridge unless I jacked it up high enough to play slide guitar. I put a credit card snip under the neck to shim it and that made it much better. (Although I think I have the mustang bridge about as high as I can make it. LOL)
20160903_125402 by
Christopher Louck, on Flickr
Looks great and sounds great. I really like these pickups a lot. They might be Greco ones, but basically they are single coils under a humbucker cover. Half the guts are empty. They just look like humbuckers.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
(Which means they have that single coil hum, but they have great tone to me.)
20160903_125136 by
Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr
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Christopher Louck, on Flickr