NSSD - Fender Super-Sonic XII
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NSSD - Fender Super-Sonic XII
Here it is - a red sparkle Fender Super-Sonic that I bought (along with an orange one) when they were blowing them out. I've had it converted to a 12-string by the gentleman who converts telecasters. So, a 12-string shortscale.
The larger neck on the Fenders (vs. the Squiers) works well for the extra strings. I still might gut it and install new pickups and pots and such.
So that is #9 - all three Fender colours, all four Squier colours, and an extra white, and an extra silver painted coral pink.
The larger neck on the Fenders (vs. the Squiers) works well for the extra strings. I still might gut it and install new pickups and pots and such.
So that is #9 - all three Fender colours, all four Squier colours, and an extra white, and an extra silver painted coral pink.
A Whole Bunch of Guitars. Some with sparkles. Some with Pearl. Some with racing stripes.
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I'm not worried about the value. It's mine.
Still, let's consider the value - A failed guitar, which was a re-issue of a failed guitar. Which was blown out for $349. In what is probably the worst colour. Permanently damaged/altered. And I spent more on the conversion and shipping than the guitar. I think about $470. Plus the customs fees to Canada. Plus the exchange rate to Canadian. So I probably have about $900 - $1000 into a guitar worth, what, $500?
But it is the only one. And it makes sense in my collection.
A 12-string, short-scale, upside-down, sparkly guitar. I still think I win.
Here's a neat idea - I could swap the neck and bridge at will and have a different colour and configuration of 12-string every week.
Still, let's consider the value - A failed guitar, which was a re-issue of a failed guitar. Which was blown out for $349. In what is probably the worst colour. Permanently damaged/altered. And I spent more on the conversion and shipping than the guitar. I think about $470. Plus the customs fees to Canada. Plus the exchange rate to Canadian. So I probably have about $900 - $1000 into a guitar worth, what, $500?
But it is the only one. And it makes sense in my collection.
A 12-string, short-scale, upside-down, sparkly guitar. I still think I win.
Here's a neat idea - I could swap the neck and bridge at will and have a different colour and configuration of 12-string every week.
A Whole Bunch of Guitars. Some with sparkles. Some with Pearl. Some with racing stripes.
Yeah, I think you do as well.wadeaminute wrote:I'm not worried about the value. It's mine.
A 12-string, short-scale, upside-down, sparkly guitar. I still think I win.
Your collection of Super-Sonics is fabulous. Love the fact you've stuck with a guitar you love and have tweaked them to cover all the bases.
Do you have any guitars that aren't Super-Sonics?
Fran wrote:I love how this place is basic as fuck.
ekwatts wrote:I'm just going to smash it in with a hammer and hope it works. Tone is all in the fingers anyway.
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It's got fresh strings on it, so no idea how hard it is to restring yet. The thicker strings will be the same, other than I can't use my winder. The thin strings are the ones that go through the new holes through the face of the headstock. It arrived with instructions, so we'll see.
It will be super easy at the bridge end - the tick ones go through the trem block as usual, and the then ones are top mounted.
I've never posted a video or a sound clip before, and it is not a priority at the moment. The stock humbuckers are hot, but it sounds good (clean and jangly) with the neck pickup's volume rolled down 25%. I am currently living a few thousand kms from my good amp (a Mesa Mini Rectifier), and only have a 2 watt Marshall to play through here, so I shall wait until it is played through a proper amp for a more substantial review.
If I don't like the stock electronics, I will change them up. Maybe a Fender XII in the bridge position and a Filter'tron for the neck?
It will be super easy at the bridge end - the tick ones go through the trem block as usual, and the then ones are top mounted.
I've never posted a video or a sound clip before, and it is not a priority at the moment. The stock humbuckers are hot, but it sounds good (clean and jangly) with the neck pickup's volume rolled down 25%. I am currently living a few thousand kms from my good amp (a Mesa Mini Rectifier), and only have a 2 watt Marshall to play through here, so I shall wait until it is played through a proper amp for a more substantial review.
If I don't like the stock electronics, I will change them up. Maybe a Fender XII in the bridge position and a Filter'tron for the neck?
A Whole Bunch of Guitars. Some with sparkles. Some with Pearl. Some with racing stripes.
While your shop dude is correct with regards to upgrades (and nothing peeves me more than seeing k0rnfreak2002 trying to flip a $200 Squier with a $100 pickup set in it for $300 on eBay) I wouldn't say a 12-string conversion could be considered an "upgrade". Nobody shopping for a regular SS would buy this guitar thinking it had been improved upon in Super Sonic terms, but plenty of people looking for a 12-string in the Fender format might spring for it over a vintage XII, Strat XII or Vista Venus, depending on their tastes/what they plan on using it for.weeping_moon wrote:Probably not. I was asking the same question in a guitar shop near. And he told me i dont get any money from upgrades.dots wrote:yep. not that it matters since it's so cool, but i wonder if it ups the value or not.singlepickup24 wrote:That's so sweet. Prolly the only one in the world.
Aug wrote:which one of you bastards sent me an ebay question asking if you can get teh kurdtz with that 64 mustang?
robertOG wrote:fran & paul are some of the original gangstas of the JS days when you'd have to say "phuck"
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I actually just sold my Squier Venus XII. Would have been redundant now, anyways.
The Venus XII is quite nice. And I wouldn't argue that my new one is better. But I prefer custom and modified to stock, and shortscale to standard Fender-scale, so I'm good.
What would be funny is if Squier drops a XII this coming year in one of the colours that I like - Daphne Blue, Fiesta Red, and / or a sparkle that I don't have. Especially funny would be if they release it in Red Sparkle.
At least I didn't pay full price for the Super-Sonic.
The Venus XII is quite nice. And I wouldn't argue that my new one is better. But I prefer custom and modified to stock, and shortscale to standard Fender-scale, so I'm good.
What would be funny is if Squier drops a XII this coming year in one of the colours that I like - Daphne Blue, Fiesta Red, and / or a sparkle that I don't have. Especially funny would be if they release it in Red Sparkle.
At least I didn't pay full price for the Super-Sonic.
A Whole Bunch of Guitars. Some with sparkles. Some with Pearl. Some with racing stripes.
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- Joined: Sun Aug 29, 2010 10:47 pm
My fellow Canadian - that is genius. I wish that came up earlier - the installed tuners (mini Hipshots), I believe, are cemented in place. I wonder if that would have worked? And why it wasn't suggested.finboy wrote:I would almost be tempted to switch the tuners that hold the high strings to locking tuners, and eliminate a potential major headache.
I am tempted now to take of the high e and figure out the procedure.
A Whole Bunch of Guitars. Some with sparkles. Some with Pearl. Some with racing stripes.