




So I've been having some wrist issues lately directly related to playing guitar. I'm wearing a brace for a while longer, stretching, icing, the whole thing. My acoustic is 25.5" scale and after borrowing a MIJ Mustang from smallsound/briansound, I'm hopeful that playing a short scale guitar will help get me back on track (along with better technique obviously). So I've been on the hunt for Mustangs and Jaguars and this popped up on my local craigslist. Aesthetically, it's practically my dream guitar. I love dark wood stains and the offset shape, so I was drooling over this at first sight. I emailed the dude immediately, and again later that day, and the day after, but didn't hear anything. I was bummed and convinced he had sold it already and just wasn't getting back to me, so I kept searching. Fast forward a few days and he still has it so I snatched it up.
Specs:
MIJ Jaguar body, stripped and finished with a walnut stain
Allparts Jaguar neck finished in gun oil, 7.25" radius
Duncan pickups, vintage in the neck & hot in the bridge
AVRI hardware & a mustang bridge
Stock wiring
built by: http://totallywiredguitars.net/
The body is fairly light and 4 pieces, so I would suspect it's made of basswood. The finish is suuuuper thin and I'm pretty sure no clear coat was applied. I can run my fingernail along the body and leave a scratch. This might have to be redone in the future? But at the moment I'm diggin how it's worn. The neck profile is wonderful. It's way thicker than the aforementioned MIJ Mustang but not quite a baseball bat. Allparts website says it measures .85" at the first fret. The pickups sound really good as well. The neck pickup seems to give me pretty much everything I'd want on my initial impression, and the bridge pickup is surprisingly rad. I usually hate bridge pickup sounds but this one seems pretty balanced, enough low end for a single coil but not super quacky. The vibrato and bridge are set up really well. There is some kind of thin rubber (a balloon perhaps?) sticking out of the bridge thimble holes and it's in there nice and snug. The vibrato arm stays right where you put it and there's no play whatsoever, if I move the arm even a tiny bit the pitch moves right along with it. I'll probably get a shorter arm for this eventually. The pick guard doesn't line up with the control plates super well, a few of the screws are drilled in at an angle, and the vibrato might be installed a teeny tiny bit at an angle, but these are all pretty minor for me. It plays wonderfully, sounds great, feels even better, and it looks rad as fuck. For those curious, I paid $570. Certainly not a steal, but it would probably cost me more to build this up on my own and it's 90% where I want it to be so I'm pleased. Which leads me to....



