What should I do with a Squier Baritone Jazzmaster neck?
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2020 8:21 pm
I just picked up a minty Squier Baritone Jazzmaster neck on the cheap(ish), I believe it is from the now super-rare antiqua Squier Jazzmaster baritone. I thought these were the same as the 27" conversion necks used on the Paranormal Telecaster baritone, but it is in fact 30" scale, I believe it might also be compatible with the Bass VI.
It looks like it would fit a normal Strat or Jazzmaster pocket so my first thought was to get one of those GFS XGP bodies that aren't drilled for bridge holes, and just move the bridge closer to the vibrato plate (mocking it up to my strat, I would just need to move the bridge back an inch or so which is doable). Then I noticed the heel of the neck is longer than a normal Fender, and the bolt pattern is drilled further up the neck. Meaning the pocket of the baritone Jazzmaster must be cut in farther to reduce the length from the body to the nut, then the bridge moved back farther back to compensate, hence why they don't use a standard JM bridge and tailpiece. I suppose I could still use one of these bodies, but I think the reach is going to feel more like playing bass than guitar, not to mention the heel will start tapering farther from the body, even though it'd still be around the standard 14th-15th fret. Would the tension physics on the neck be less than ideal if I did this? It will also make the overall length of the instrument rather long.
The other option may be to try to make a cheap Bass VI, but by the time all's said and done it'd probably be cheaper to just buy a used Bass VI, unless I find a great deal on a loaded body. I suppose I would have to save an eBay search and just hope for the best.
The other two options are either just giving up and returning it, or trying to flip it on eBay. I paid $90 for the neck, and complete baritone JMs are selling for around $700+ now. I imagine the value is in the complete instrument as there's no one selling baritone JM bodies, but is it crazy to think it might fetch at least double what I paid on eBay?
It looks like it would fit a normal Strat or Jazzmaster pocket so my first thought was to get one of those GFS XGP bodies that aren't drilled for bridge holes, and just move the bridge closer to the vibrato plate (mocking it up to my strat, I would just need to move the bridge back an inch or so which is doable). Then I noticed the heel of the neck is longer than a normal Fender, and the bolt pattern is drilled further up the neck. Meaning the pocket of the baritone Jazzmaster must be cut in farther to reduce the length from the body to the nut, then the bridge moved back farther back to compensate, hence why they don't use a standard JM bridge and tailpiece. I suppose I could still use one of these bodies, but I think the reach is going to feel more like playing bass than guitar, not to mention the heel will start tapering farther from the body, even though it'd still be around the standard 14th-15th fret. Would the tension physics on the neck be less than ideal if I did this? It will also make the overall length of the instrument rather long.
The other option may be to try to make a cheap Bass VI, but by the time all's said and done it'd probably be cheaper to just buy a used Bass VI, unless I find a great deal on a loaded body. I suppose I would have to save an eBay search and just hope for the best.
The other two options are either just giving up and returning it, or trying to flip it on eBay. I paid $90 for the neck, and complete baritone JMs are selling for around $700+ now. I imagine the value is in the complete instrument as there's no one selling baritone JM bodies, but is it crazy to think it might fetch at least double what I paid on eBay?