
This rant has been a long time coming, but I was just looking at a few ads where a guy is literally ripping apart a 1961 Jazzmaster and selling it off as parts.
Granted, that is pretty uncommon... but it is NOT uncommon at all among our vintage shortscales.
Musicmasters, Mustangs, Duo-Sonics, and Jaguars are worth considerably more when parted out than they are if left complete. A nice MusicMaster from '65 with the original case will fetch about $700. If you rip it apart, you get $300 for the body, $250 for the neck, $150 for the pickup, $100 for the tuners, $100 for the bridge, $100 for the pickguard, and another $100 for the loaded control plate, and $250 for the case... for a total of about $1350. You can do the same math with a Duo-Sonic, just ad another $150 for the other pickup and $50 for the switches. Or for a Mustang, add another $50 for the trem (rather than bridge).
The result is that there are a lot of eBay sellers picking up nice vintage Shortscales and then ripping them apart to sell the pieces. It quite honestly infuriates me to no end.
Does anyone else feel that this kind of behavior violates some kind of ethical code among vintage guitar owners? Sure, SOME of us benefit from acquiring that missing part or two that are hard to find - but there are plenty of jacked up old Fenders which can be parted out... the nicer examples which are mostly original should be left alone IMO.
Rant off.