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Author Topic: Guitar in Progress: Banana Pudding
Jim-
Williamson

Posts: 23
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Post Guitar in Progress: Banana Pudding
on: August 3, 2012, 08:43
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Image
Here's a 2004 Squier '51 that's been sitting in my closet for years. Decided to bring it to life with some new components. Still not completely happy with it. Here's the report.

Changed the pickups: GFS Lil Killer at neck, Harmonic Design Z-90 at bridge. Price range: dirt cheap to respectably spendy.

New bridge: another Guitar Fetish product, their Top Mount Hardtail bridge with the appropriately narrow string spacing.

New electronics: 500k vol pot, and a blend pot w/center detent in place of a pickup selector. Full clockwise is all rails, full counter is all Z-90.

Positives: Light weight body (basswood, I believe). Unvarnished one-piece neck. Nice range of tones using the blend knob. Really like the Z-90 full on.

Not-so-positives: The new bridge. During hard playing at rehearsal last night, one of the height adjustment screws on the low E bridge saddle de-torqued nearly all the way out and into my palm. Hopefully, some Lok-Tite will solve the problem.

Also: the bass-side of the GFS pickup tended to catch my low E string during vigorous strumming. (I know, easy solution: Jim, don't play like that!)

So I might be looking for a new neck pickup -- maybe a lipstick tube? Something with a lower, less string-catchy profile. Any suggestions?

As for the name, a former bandmate commented on the color scheme: "Looks like banana pudding!"

Double D

Posts: 195
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Post Re: Guitar in Progress: Banana Pudding
on: August 17, 2012, 01:00
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I suppose you could just set it up to handle a .56 (or something big and beefy like) that for an E string. That should handle the "boinging out of tune and hanging up on pickup" problem. It might also allow you to lower the bass end of the neck pickup out of harm's way, without causing an undue loss of signal.
Haven't had one of those bridge-saddle scars in some time...Lok-Tite, or clear coat nail polish will definitely inhibit your bridge's ability to hurt you.
Cool guitar; it reminds me of those old Robin guitars that all the Texas guys played in the eighties!

zyon

Posts: 3
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Post Re: Guitar in Progress: Banana Pudding
on: August 17, 2012, 07:27
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Drop the pickup height slightly so the magnets don;t catch the string so easily. A turn of the height screw will not likely screw up the balance. If it does, you could tweak the height of the bridge pickup slightly too.

Personally, I'd route the body and pickguard for a humbucker. You can get templates from Stewmac for both routes.

Jim-
Williamson

Posts: 23
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Post Re: Guitar in Progress: Banana Pudding
on: August 18, 2012, 07:05
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Thanks, Double D, zyon.

Haven't tried nail polish on bridge saddle screws. Makes sense that it would work -- might be easier to remove if I need to adjust them.

Problem with these Squiers is the basswood body is so thin, I'm afraid I'll punch through the back if I tighten/lower the pickup height adjustment screw any more. Easy enough solution there: use a shorter screw. Or just anchor the pickup to the pick guard.

Thicker E string? Might be worth a try. I have a .011 set on there now, which gives me a .048 on that low E. I could go heavier.

Or I could relegate this guitar to at-home play, where I tend to have a more relaxed attitude and am less prone to causing or taking damage.

Oinkus

Posts: 236
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Post Re: Guitar in Progress: Banana Pudding
on: August 18, 2012, 13:19
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I would put that neck pickup all the way up and add a third pickup and 5 way switch

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