I was a bit excited when I saw the back of the headstock. I recognised it as old Ibanez.
So I offered to take it home and try to restore it to former glories.
It appeared to be have active pickups and a Floyd Rose. Of the two knobs, the lower one down is a switch. I assume it's a coil tap. Haven't plugged it on yet, though. Nice, slightly metallic paint. I'm expecting it to be more metallic and maybe deeper under the pickguard. Humbucker ring on a pickguard....
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0033_zps1cvrbuqs.jpg)
Someone had sanded the back off. There's a good bit of material has been removed by doing this, as now the back plates sit about proud of the body.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0036_zpst5sbps63.jpg)
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0035_zpsqq9eeb1c.jpg)
I think this means it's the 554th guitar made at the Fujigen factory in 1987. This guitar is the same age as me!
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0064_zps5pnnoo64.jpg)
Licensed Floyd Rose. Don't think I've seen one this old. It's been a while since I've taken apart a guitar with a Floyd Rose but this didn't seem as familiar as I was expecting it to. Weird how normally there's that little bit of space on the bass side of the plate where a company name goes, but on this it's blank.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0040_zpsfg0lhn8s.jpg)
The backs of the pickups. Note the weird mark on the pickguard. Fake cigarette burn?
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0043_zpsyesj4fav.jpg)
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0049_zpshuq9szll.jpg)
Everything on the inside of the guitar is covered in a sticky pink dust which is presumably the paint and sawdust from where the back was sanded off. I'm starting to doubt that the switch is a coil tap. I'm not great with electronics, but that's not what I'd guess one would look like.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0056_zpsh1pfelr3.jpg)
And the inside of the batter compartment has... no battery. Put, plenty of sawdust from sanding, which makes me think that the electronics have never been touched.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/DSC_0066_zps34xr4yhp.jpg)
Neck stamps.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0057_zpsfrilaf1a.jpg)
Took the bridge complete apart to clean.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/Mobile%20Uploads/DSC_0061_zpsuhzmpfvf.jpg)
Oiled and scrubbed the fingerboard, cleaned everything. Put it all back together and go to restring to realise that the pack of strings I lifted from school has already been robbed for it's high e and b strings. So it'll have to wait till tomorrow.
![Image](http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m314/BacchusPaul/DSC_0067_zpss03yybps.jpg)
Still though, I've enjoyed taking it apart and I'm looking forward to getting it sounding good. The tricky thing is what we do with it next. It probably shouldn't go into the classrooms along with all our bullet strats where it'll get ruined. We might keep it as a studio guitar to be used by more sympathetic players (we're lucky enough to have a recording studio). Or we could sell it and buy a stack of Squiers.... I'm sure I could fit it in the collection somewhere....