Squiers are no more Fender than Epiphone is Gibson. Putting a Fender logo on a Squier really just means one of two things. You're either insecure about a owning a Squier and you're trying to impress a bunch of cork sniffing gear snobs or you're up to no good and you're trying rip someone off by passing a Squier off as a Fender.
"Fake" here means passing something off as something that it is not. This is usually done with the intent to defraud a buyer. The intent of the video is to keep people from being taken. Some people just dont understand.
If you ever come across an 80's Japanese Squire then buy it they are awesome and in most cases are better sounding/ built than comparative Fender guitars of that period
Some of the "lawsuit" Japanese guitars are excellent. I have a 1978 Hondo Les Paul that I bought new and still has at least one more fret dressing left in it. Can't say the same about my Gibbo double cut made in the 90s. It needs a complete re-fret. Probably played it a bit more, but still...
JV squires were the best fender like guitars of that period. The built quality was awesome. I have bought one new back then ( fist series) and still have it
Lol I did that for a long time before I purchased a squier bullet with a shorter scale, and hardtail bridge mij and a squier standard telecaster..late eighties or early nineties..
It just the difference in the way its spelled in the U.S. over how its spelled in the U.k.. The proper company name is Squier but someone in the U.K. was taught to spell it Squire. Either way is proper in writing.
Really, this had to be pointed out? Duh people, ofc they are not the same. If someone sells a Squier posing as a Fender, it is a FAKE Fender. If the logo needs to be altered to make it a “Fender”, that should tell you it is not the real deal.
I have a Squire Classic Vibe Tele & it’s amazing! People have done blindfold comparisons online with custom shop Fenders & Classic Vibe squires & they can’t tell the difference!
Kennis Russell I just got one a little over a month ago, the Squier CV Custom Tele 60s. It is indeed a very nice guitar. Super light, too. I did replace the nut with a GraphTec nut, but, other than that, definitely no complaints.
Yeah the Squier Classic Vibes are so much better than most ( bone nut, no fret sprout, etc) MIMs but if somebody put a fender logo on it then it is still fake. much like if somebody took a MIM Fender and put a squier logo on it instead then that would be a fake squier guitar....not that anybody would do that. i would be pissed if i bought what i thought was a classic vibe squier but it turned out to be a MIM Fender I would be pissed.
Me too! But so what? Who is arguing? How is this relevant? Did you spend $1500 or $2500 on it thinking you were getting a USA Fender only to get it home and realize the it was a Classic Vibe with a fake logo put on it? Guessing not. Kennis has never said Squiers can't be good guitars, only that if someone slaps on a Fender logo and sells it as a Fender, it's a fake.
That's 20 minutes of my life I won't get back, watch it back Kennis, you gibber on through the video without actually explaining what you mean. You could have done it in 2 minutes
You are so right about people changing decals and trying pass off a lesser brand as a premium brand. I own and play live with two Squier guitars, but I always tell people the guitars are the Squier brand. Enjoyed your video.
@@Subcat001 Actually the narrower spaced neck/middle pickup poles on cheaper Squiers are a better design than on a Fender and would arguably be an upgrade.
seriously one of my biggest pet peeves. You wouldn't sell a Smart Car as a BMW, even though it's the same company. That would be fraud, unfortunately in the Squier/Fender case it's more of a matter of ignorance than malice.
@marko i agree with you on the pricing. Although as of the last couple years, everything increased in pricing especially with fender and its subsidiaries. The 95 squier i have my parents bought when quality was still decent on squiers. Now i dont buy squiers new. I've only bought used. I had a squier 2 end of run. I got it for $120. So used is the way to go on squiers.
@@caerparavel Yeah and it's called practice until you can actually play the guitar. It doesn't matter what is on the headstock or the price. People give up trying to learn the electric guitar because they think that buying an expensive guitar is going to make them a better player that is stupid and it ain't going to happen if you don't dedicate the time to learn.
My brother's wife's previous husband (who passed away) had a starcaster that was decked out really nice, she let me have it and an ibanez pf5 acoustic.
Squier isn't made by fender at all, they are designed by fender! My Squier is made by Cortek in Indonesia, its a nice guitar but it isn't made by fender!
I love the Mexican strats. Its pretty much the same guitar as the American standard but half the price. Not for a collector or a seller but if you just want to play it, they are hard to beat
I will say that early 80's Japanese Squiers with the JV and SQ serial numbers are very nice instruments. I love my SQ P-bass and Telecaster. A pickup swap and a refret to 6105s made the Tele perfect. Not that there was anything wrong with the existing fretwork, I just prefer bigger frets over tiny vintage ones.
Wow, people are so defensive, no one is saying your Squiers suck or they're not a company owned by Fender, but clearly Squiers are the lower end of what Fender makes, removing the logo and slapping a Fender logo on there like it's a higher end version of that guitar is being deceitful. It's trying to fool people into believing you have a higher end model, which, who cares, unless you're going to sell that as a "Fender". It is not a Fender, it is a Squier "by Fender". It's wrong to do that, just don't be wrong.
QueeferSutherland If I comment on Squiers (which I have in this comments section), its not as a defensive thing, its to profess my love for them haha. I’d argue that a lot of MIM fenders aren’t any better than, say, a classic vibe squier, all the same. Because of the huge price gap though, yea....its despicable to see anyone selling a $400 instrument for $800 or something like that. Ppl that do that should be locked up.
Fender is magical, the guitar world has twisted knickers over their instruments, amateurs and pros alike. However, i have never heard a voice as sweet as an American made Fender Stratocaster and its relatives. I do however want a guitar from every quality maker because i have listened to their songs and have been made to realize that quality in craftsmanship is a must but the differences in sound is what we chase. May the chase continue.
i've always almost gotten off on the fact i'll play an early Squire Silver Series Tele on stage, (rarely, as i'm a bassist) but squire have done some amazing stuff over the years, this one plays simply incredibly, though it's had 30 years to get this way lol but i still love the shock when other players pick up my "Squire" only to see how it plays... however, even though it is essentially a fender, strait off the fender Japan production line, with a top load bridge being the only deviation from a 91 fender japan tele, if i were to change the headstock over to a fender logo, it'd 100% be a fake fender, no questios asked...
I dare you to take a Fender and put a Squier sticker on it. That way it won't be stolen. After all, it's just pieces of wood. Amazing how we put value on dead things. Are you sure that replacement bass neck is really manufactured by Fender?
This is what I’m going to say if it plays and sounds good I don’t care about the brand only thing some people pay for is a little printed sticker on a headstock sometimes. So I don’t care what it is. As long as it’s a great instrument you should use it.
i have a squier guitar, already upgraded the whole guitar part. when I play the fender player series guitar, it sounds less good compared to the upgraded squier guitar.
I bought a Starcaster at my local Music-Go-Round for $100 a few years ago specifically in order to do an extreme mod/upgrade to my specs. I hand made a custom extended brushed stainless steel pick guard loaded with 3 quad rail/coil humbuckers and wired it like a '50's Les Paul with coil splits. That does mean it has 3 pairs of control pots. all 500k ohm audio taper. 3 P/P vol. and 2 regular tone pots with a P/P in the bridge tone position to activate the bridge and neck pickups together regardless of any other controls. and the splits still work either way. I upgraded to a Fender 5-Way blade switch, upgraded the sustain block to a full size brass block added roller saddles to the bridge as well and floated it while tuning the 9-46 stings to E-Flat standard like any good Strat should be tuned the headstock . I oriented the pickups so that the active coils are toward the bridge when coil split. since the pickups have 4 smaller coils, 1 each for the rails and have 3 very powerful ceramic magnets between the bottoms of the rails below the bottom plates which the rails are soldered to. they are wired in pairs start and finish for north and south, having 5 wires. 1 braded main ground the the other fo mentioned earlier. As the actual output of [pickups is so minimal, measuring in mere millivolts, I used thin stranded wire that i stripped out of a computer VGA cable for the sizes and colors to both save space in a very crowded control cavity and because that's all that is really needed for the limited power from the pickups. after a few false starts with the wiring of so many connections in the control circuit and finally getting it all correctly routed through the circuit it all works as designed and sounds out of this world. the stars and planets space themed paint job on the body and head stock lends to its new name--- The "Stellarcaster" a bit further out from Stratocaster and then the Starcaster on out to the Stellarcaster, My new custom creation. Wanna Play???
What drives me nuts is that when you search fender on Reverb or EBay 85% of the results are Squier. Fender did make a Squier series Stratocaster in the mid 90’s MIM, I had one and it was junk compared to the used regular MIM Stratocaster from the year before in my house.
ikwym i usually go low to high price search now and eventually around page 25 the squirrel guitars Squier Strats are not filling every position on the search .
I bought four different guitars at different times from the same local pawnshop and each time hung a $150 fake Fender Stratocaster which i KNEW it wasn't what it was disguised to be but the top-loading hardtail bridge stayed on my mind that i got it for $75. First thing I did was detach the neck to check the date and that's when I discovered that the Strat was a Indonesia made 2002 Squier Bullet. What looked like a rosewood fingerboard as I was cleaning it turned out to be a stained Indian Laurel fingerboard and then i removed the fret end sprouts, cleaned up the jagged edges on the painted headstock as well as the painted-over tuner bushings and after putting new strings on and providing neck relief, then i began w/the following: I did a 5-way switch swap replacing the faulty side lug switch (only 1 & 5 worked) for an inline, put on a wider spaced Tusq nut, a triple string tree and currently replacing the pickups for better aftermarket ones.
Side note Ron Thorn the principal master builder at Fender's custom shop mentioned in an interview recently that his #1 guitar is an 80's MIJ Squier. :)
he ........... does not know that is fender is a company name, squire in one of its models...dee.....deee...deee...........see models USA. mim. mij , squire , starcaster , strat , hwy , tx , affinity , standard , tele , jackson, pc1, others..........
Hey Kennis, I think the problem is that people aren't getting your point. I understand what your saying. That there are people out there taking Squier guitars (or Fender style headstock guitars) sanding off the Brand name and putting the Fender Brand logo and trying to sell them as "REAL" American made or even MIM guitars. I'm also on eBay and reverb and Letgo and so on and seen so many fakes. I was at a pawn shop once and they were selling a fake Gibson for $700. I even pointed it out and they thought I didn't know what i was talking about. People need to understand that when buying a used guitar you need to have some knowledge of the instrument. I get cautious when I only see three pics of the guitar that they are selling online. Usually, they don't show the headstock. That to me is a sign of a fake. But they also can be bad at taking pictures too. When trying to buy a guitar I ask questions and ask for more CLEAR pictures of the guitar.
Same with me! My first electric guitar was the Starcaster and honestly it was one of my favourite guitars. Then my guitar teacher said it played like crap and tried to "fix" the action on it now rendering it unplayable coz now I get a whole lot a ✨ fretbuzz ✨ I plan to mod it in the future with some Seymour Duncan's and new tremolo but I really hate when people give cheap guitars a lot of crap. Lol check back in with me in a few months to see how the modding is going lol
I love my Squier Strat. It’s my goto guitar. Great tones and plays really well. Its a 94 model and aged really well. Must have been made on a Tuesday or Thursday.
My old Japanese Squier has fender stamps on the bridge and tuners and was made from the same body and neck as a Fender would have been at the time, with the only difference being the electronics (which I've since replaced). Close enough to a Fender?
I love my starcaster.modded it with a tusq nut, I lock the strings at the tuners and put a set of roller saddles and a 12 $ chinese pickup and its awesome. I'm not paying for a grand for a brand name. Besides, the tone is in your fingers and amp
@@darrenharriss8972 You got the point :P But yeah, you could put a Porsche body kit on top of a universal VW undercarriage used for a Beetle (ps. I had a colleague that modded his Beetle that way. Looked awesome! Sounded absolutely f*king horrific with the original VW engine)
@@forkless There used to be companies that advertised in car magazines in the 60's that offered exactly that same idea in a kit. You could buy the kit, strip your bug and a few days later have a whole new car. Still felt, sound and drive like a beetle, but it looked better. My favorites were the new hoods and things you could get to turn your bug into a Rolls Royce. Absolutely wonderful, imaginative stuff.
Us fender, mim and mij fender and squier have slightly different dimensions, string spacing being the main one. You will run into this when you try to upgrade squiers with fender parts or to repair a fender with parts from china.
Jazzmaster tremolos are a good example. Squier uses unbranded trems without a block button. They weigh in at 275g and have 50mm string spacing. A import / mij trem weighs the same and has the same string spacing but has the fender logo and a block button. A US trem however weighs about 320g and has a string spacing of 56mm. The steel is slightly thicker at places, the string holes are smoother, thentremolo bar collet is tighter. The differences ate not huge, but if you have them side by side you notice them. And if you upgrade a squier jazzmaster with a US trem but keep the original bridge you will find you have a tad more binding at the saddles and a just a bit more tuning stability issues. Fender is sneaky that way.
Great points and I figured you were going with this route, but the title was kinda misleading. "Squier is NOT Fender" implies that they are two separate entities when really it's a subdivision of Fender's line. Better title name: *When* a Squier is NOT a Fender.
I have a "partscaster", it has Fender machine heads, Fender wiring harness, Fender string trees, DiMarzio pick ups & even a stratocaster water slide with the Fender name removed. I might even get a Fender neck on it one day. IF ! I ever sell it, I obviously would NOT be trying to pass it off as a Fender, because it's not, even though it plays and sounds comparable to a Fender. Common sense isn't it?
There is too much guitar snobbery, I have over twenty guitars, they all play and sound different, but one my favourites to play is Squier Custom Telecaster, I find the tone suits my needs fine and it is well finished, it plays beautifully, the only mod I made was a screw on jack socket/cup. I have mostly teles, not all fenders, I even have one that says Gibson on the headstock, but I never for a minute thought that it was a Gibson.
Squier is essentially licensed by Fender. Fender says make this guitar cheaper and easier and we will add our name to it. Most people can’t spend $2,000+ for a guitar but they can spend $700 or so for a similar guitar.
Mine is one of the Squiers in the top end of Squiers, which is to say, it’s not hard to find Fender owners happy to hawk and spit on my prized possession! However...as others point out, they are actually a different beast, while certainly being able to sound similar depending on a multitude of things, including whether you are willing to accept that a $300 guitar can in any way be a substitute for a Made-in-America ‘actual’ Fender instrument. I am glad of the lighter weight, the slightly smaller and slimmer (I think) body, and so on. I drove 200 miles to get the only Candy Apple Red one in the country for sale at the time (UK), and it just means a whole lot to me, whether it’s a ‘real’ Fender or not, it is as usable and as wonderful to me, as any classic ‘real’ Fender costing 10 times as much, is to a seasoned musician/guitarist. If it were not for the creation of ‘Squier’ I wouldn’t have a Fender-style guitar of the quality I have. That for me, would be a shame! Everyone’s quite protective of their chosen instrument I think, it wouldn’t take much to start a brawl, so I try not to. It’s kind of akin to issuing forth with a sudden declaration of an opinion about someone’s children, that’s how emotive it can be. I’d go a long way to not appear to be looking down on someone else’s choice of instrument, it’s quite a close relationship! [EDIT - PS don’t try to negotiate a price down of your chosen guitar, because it was on display, after you told the guy you drove 200 miles to see this particular, specific, individual guitar. I know, you could foresee that as a barrier to getting a bargain...and it does not bother me at all, I just wanted to secure that particular instrument. I’ll never be able to do it justice, I just love playing it.]
Hi there, great video! Since the topic of the video is about Squier branded instruments, there are some interesting facts about it: of course, those of us hip to fender history are aware of the Japanese squiers of the eighties. These guitars and basses are now almost as coveted as the Japanese Fender branded instruments, due to the excellent build quality (and I believe they were also produced on the same assembly lines at times). There’s also the strange case of Korean made Fender instruments and Mexican made Squier instruments, as well as the Fender branded instruments with Fender decals on the headstocks that were marketed in the “Squier series”. By the by, I would like to mention that I own a couple of Squier instruments, both of which I’ve completely replaced every part save for the body and neck, and have put the fender decal on the front of the headstock. Essentially, these instruments are now almost completely custom to my taste for studio and live performance. Likewise, I built a bass with a Squier body and an MIM fender neck that I dearly love. HOWEVER, even though I’ve put the fender decals on, I have kept the Squier serial numbers. If ever I sell these instruments (which to be honest I doubt I will, though that’s regardless to the main point), I will put them up for sale as squiers with heavy modification. It doesn’t matter that I put custom shop pickups in them, high end electronics, and really nice hardware, they’re still Squier made instruments at their core. Exception of course would be the partscaster I did with the Squier body and fender neck, because that does have a fender neck with a fender serial on it.
Well Squier guitars are basically cheap Fenders but that doesn't mean that Squier also is Fender. They produce basically licensed copies of the original. Yes it says Squier by Fender but at the back of the headstock it also says "Designed and backed by Fender" which just means they are using the designs that Fender provides and are allowed to do that, therefore are legitimate copies.
Interested to know your opinion on the Squier Vista series from 1996-1998. The Jagmaster, Super Sonic and Venus from those years were made in the same Fender Japan factory and right along side the fender Mustangs, Jaguars and Jazzmasters that were imported to america in those years as the Fender Classic Series. Exact same parts, build quality, literally everything except the sticker.
It's fake Strat. People say "Squire Strat", but that's not a thing. It looks like a Strat, it quacks like a Strat. But it's a Squire something, not a Strat. Having said that, Fender don't make the best Strat shaped guitar, but they do make the only one legitimately labeled Stratocaster. Thanks fella.
Very good video. I just bought a Squire with a Fender logo. I thought it was a great deal for 100$. Turned out to not be the case. Very disappointing. Your knowledge and explanation was very helpful. Thank you.
There are loads of beginners out there, and many more unscrupulous people. A video pointing out that loads of people are out there to rip you off and explaining that in simple terms is good for them. If you you don't need that advice, don't watch the video. With the rise of Facebook marketplace, counterfeiting is on the up. If you bother to watch the video, Ken is trying to protect consumers and has no problem with any guitar that you may choose to play, or how it's labelled. Just don't sell it as a legit Fender if it's not.
Didn’t know they were made in Cali. I’ve got one of those myself... it’s an absolute beast! Showed a pic of it to a guy at guitar center to see what he might give me for it, he said that’s not a squier that’s a player🤣 Had to blow the picture up on the headstock for him to see, anyway thanks for the info
All the people who own Squires are going to say that they are legitimate Fenders because they don't want to admit its an inferior product. For an extra $100 you could buy a Korean made or Mexican made Fender that is a real Fender. I own a mik strat and I love it dearly. Plays insane.
Lucy Fuir Not here in Canada, you can’t. Ppl sell mim fenders for alot more $ used than a new cv/vm squier, simply bc its ‘Fender’. That ‘$100 more’ bit.....might’ve been true a few years back, but not any more. I’ve tried out just as many mim ‘duds’ as indonesian squiers. I’ve got a US tele that has string ferrules falling out the back when I change strings, no matter what I do (which is nuts considering it was a $1k guitar) and I’ve seen mim strats/teles/jazz basses/etc with almost the same ‘crappy bridges and tuners’ you’d find on a squier affinity. I own examples of mim/us fender, chinese/indonesian squier and I can honestly say I love all of em, none of them are really that far apart in terms of quality. I’m at a point now where I’d consider it silly to spend $1k or more on a US Fender just for the brand name......I just bought a squier classic vibe 70’s strat for around $400 though, and lemme tell ya: this guitar plays and sounds as good as any mia fender strat I’ve ever played. If I’m being really picky, I might upgrade the saddles on the bridge and put a tort pickguard on it....for a few dollars, and it’ll be perfect for my needs. For anyone who knows how to set up a guitar and has fun doing that kind of stuff.....just buy a squier and save a hilarious amount of money.
@@kennisrussell Thank you very much. I'll have to find someone with some photo shop skills I suppose then. I would love my own custom logo for my partscaster but I have no skills in that area ha
Obviously from the direction of the comments on your previous video people did not get your intention. Suffice to say, if you change the headstock logo on any guitar to a more expensive guitar logo with the intention of fooling someone into paying more for a cheaper guitar than its value it's a fake. And the person who does so is despicable and corrupt.
The 2016 "Squier" *Skullcaster* Haruna Ono (Scandal) Signature model is labeled a Squier® but technically it .is a Fender. That specific run of 300 units are pretty much all Fender parts specs. The first run in 2014 were made to be beginner guitars. The 2nd run though the build was completely changed with different paint, shielding bridge pickups etc. at the request of the artist. Having worked with the band at the time *Haru* wanted the guitar to be closer to what she actually plays. The design was changed. A compromise was made To keep it in the same price range as the 2014s the company band branded case was deleted & the guitar sold by itself only. The only reason the 2016s had a Squier ® logo on the headstock was the band's sponsored contract said it had too. I I have had many techs look at the guitar and 100% have said it is better quality than an Ameican made Tele. There are exceptions to the rule. I know this is a rare case but sometimes labels aren't what they mean.
he ........... does not know that is fender company name, squire in one of its models...dee.....deee...deee...........see models USA. mim. mij , squire , starcaster , strat , hwy , tx , affinity , standard , tele , jackson, pc1, others..........
My pet peave is when people call it a "Fender Squier" like they're trying to make it sound more impressive buy putting the word Fender in front of it. Just own the fact that you have a Squier. I'll be far more impressed by something that says Squier on the headstock and plays amazingly than you someone telling me it's a Fender Squier
It is a Fender Squier... if the seller was sold and marketed a guitar, branded ‘squier by Fender’ , they have every right to sell it on, as - squier by fender..... look on the fender website, they sell ..... squiers on there , whether it annoys you or not, is irrelevant , the seller is doing nothing wrong
No issue with "Squier by Fender". It's a really petty, irrational hatred of people specifically saying "Fender Squier" in the same way you'd say "Fender Stratocaster" or "Fender Telecaster"
OMG that $125 dollar 1971 /1994 Fender jazz bass is incredible. I LOVE the beat up look, too. I'm a sucker for real road worn basses. That means it's GOOD. I don't trust a pristine bass as much.
Hi, I was given a strat like guitar that was all beat up and neglected in a basement for years to the point of being rusty. It had a fender logo bridge but the remainder of the guitar was very suspect. It had a no name replacement neck. I took it all apart, cleaned it up, sanded down all the dings and dents and put it back together and found that this no-name neck was perfect and I could set the action nice and low with perfect intonation. I loved this guitar for its playability, but it sounded a bit weak and was one guitar too many so I traded it for a Donner Bass, which is a low cost guitar, but also vey playable and sounds good in a Fender amp. Just goes to show that logos don't necessarily make a great guitar, unless it plays nicely.....Ken
Yea...I have owned a couple of both...love them all... Couple of thoughts: I know a guy who, as a hobby, assembles guitars. Sometimes Chinese kits, sometimes total legit parts casters, using Fender parts or Fender licensed stuff. Never a head stock logo.... On the back of the headstock he uses a wood burning tool to sign it, assign it a #,to spell out in one inch tall letters "COPY"...... If you ask, he'll give you a build sheet so you know what you are buying...
Kennis Russell...In fact Fender only makes Fender guitars in two factories, one in the USA and one in Mexico...so a Squier is not made by Fender even if it says"by Fender'' on the headstock...The Fender Musical Instruments Company (FMIC), who owns the Fender brand, Squier brand EVH brand, Gretsch brand to name just a few, has Squier guitars made by Yako Musical instruments LTD in China under contract...and before Yako got the contract...Squiers were built in the Cort Guitars is a South Korean guitar manufacturing company located in Seoul. The company is one of the largest guitar makers in the world, and produces instruments for many other companies including Epiphone... Cort also has factories in Indonesia and China...In short, a Squier is not made by Fender Guitars and Fender guitars don't own Squier...FMIC owns both brands and Squiers will always be built by the company who bids the lowest for the contract to build them but rest assured that they will not be built in the USA , Mexico, by Fender guitar employees or in a Fender factory...and Mighty Mite Licensed neck is not a Fender neck...Mighty Mite pays a Licensing fee to FMIC for the right to use the Trade Mark protected headstock shape...but it does not imply in any way that the quality is on par,better or worse than a real fender neck...just saying..
I'm not even watching the whole thing, I just came to upvote the fact that Squier is not Fender. It was Fender, it would say Fender on the headstock, not Squier by Fender.
There are some guitars that are a Fender Squier series, made in the 80s until the late 90s. I have one - it's a 1993 made in Mexico, utilizing the same electronics as the MIM Fender Stratocaster from that year, with cheaper hardware.
I do appreciate your care in wording. For those who are not aware, Squier stringed instruments date back to the 1890. Fender purchased the company in 1965. Leo founded Fender in 1947. Squier is the old man here. That does not mean they are better than the Fullerton Fenders. However the history is much longer. Fender does own Squier Guitars. As such, the Fender line is authorised for construction to Squier by Fender. It does not mean they are Built by Fender. Just Authorised. On the subject of Mexican Fenders. The oddball idea that they are less than the Fullerton Players Series Fenders is hilarious. The Mexican Fender guitar plant is less than 200 miles (186 miles) from the Fullerton plant. So maybe its just patriotism that Made In America somehow makes them "better". Now I did say *Players Series*....not Custom Shop. You cannot compare Custom Shop guitars to anything else made by Fender, Fullerton, Mexico or Squier. I dont know much about Japanese Fenders to comment on the quality of those, or where they are ultimately made and why Japanese Fenders are unique and cannot be found Stateside unless you have it shipped. In short.....like the guy with bad grammar It no matter if play good 🎉
I have a mim Strat that I decided to do a colour change. After removing the original finish I discovered that the body was made up of 9 pieces of scrap wood glue together. Disappointed.
One of my favorite strats ever is the recent black Squier Bullet that has the HSS configuration and the sparkle pickguard. The neck on that thing played amazingly well. Sadly, the electronics aren't great, but it's a REALLY cheap instrument that looks more impressive at first glance than many Fenders. It just has that look that I love. You could get one new for 130 bucks (might still be able to) but I think I got mine used for like 70 or 80. I left it with a teacher since he didn't have one in his classroom studio. However, I'd play one of those things in full stadiums with no guilt. It didn't sound as good as many guitars, but it felt amazing to play and looked great. I've played a few MiM Strats that actually felt worse to play and (to be fair due to having only single coils) sounded worse for what I play. On the other hand, the best strat I've ever played was a Mexican Strat with a Carvin pickup in the bridge. In conclusion, I don't know what my point was but guitars are cool.
I purchased a Squier Candy Apple Red body, doesn't have a assembly number, no neck plate, pickguard or electronics. I am rebuilding it as a Super Squier with Seymour Duncan Distortion HSS pickups, Babicz Bridge and Warmoth maple /maple neck with Fender locking tuners. When I bought the body, it was advertised as Squier Classic Vibe 70s, how would I know?
For those who say they have Squires, they're fakes...for those who have Squiers, they're not and in many cases are as good as USA Fenders at a fraction of the cost. Check your headstock logo Squire owners! Pedantic?...yes, but accurate.
I checked out one of those 70s vibe squires and a new bullet. Hoping my kids would get involved. I have a schecter and build guitars so have a few customs. You know I've gravitated to using their guitars lately. Shhhh don't tell anyone I'm using a Squire lol. Nah just kidding. I'm actually kind of impressed. The 70s vibe is amazing. The bullet is a bullet. It's not bad dont get me wrong. I'm actually impressed for $120 brand new pfttt it's amazing too. I dig the sound it makes
Bought an Epiphone LP Special II, 20 years ago 2 months in electronics went haywire took to shop where I purchased it tech got into the display where the Gibson parts were 4 hours later my Epi had Original Gibson Les Paul pick-ups and toggle switch. So is it Epi or Gibson now?
Fender dusted off the Starcaster name in the early 2000s for an entire line of value-priced, entry-level instruments sold at Cost co. These “Starcaster by Fender” guitars and drums, however, had nothing to do with the original Starcaster guitar, which has undergone something of a rehabilitation. In 2013, due to rising demand, Fender reintroduced the Starcaster, the Coronado, and put into production the extremely rare Starcaster bass-the only offset semi-hollow bass guitar in Fender history.
A huge difference between a Squire, MIM, and US Strats is materials. Frets, pickup magnets and wire, woods, bridges, etc, it all adds up and makes a difference in both quality and price. That doesn't mean a cheap guitar can't play well or sound good though. My cheap acoustic is awesome, but it's frets wear really fast due to cheap material used.
I have one of the early Squier Stratocasters sold to me at Manny’s Guitars in Manhattan in 1984 - from the low serial number appears to be the first batch from the original Fender Japan production. I was surprised to see how much worse the quality was on more recent ones made in other countries.
What model of Squier are you comparing it to a Bullet, Affinity, Standard, or Classic Vibe? Today, there are many versions of a Squier Stratocaster. It does make a difference.
I got a squire for $174. The wiring was ridiculous and a pickup was so crappy, it doesn't work anymore. Bridge and neck pickups work, I got new ones. Modded it up. It is now my best guitar. Some Squires are considered for top 10 lists of best guitars (do a youtube search of top 10 guitars). When I see Strats in stores, they are between $3,000- $7,000. I was never able to afford one.
I’ve actually know at least one person who put a Squier logo on an American Fender. He did it because he plays a lot of bars where guitars tend to disappear if you turn your back, and people are less likely to steal a Squier. However, if he tries to sell that guitar at some point he will have to make an effort to prove that it is a Fender and not an upgraded Squier.
Hello. Congratulations on the channel. I don't agree with the argument regarding the value of guitars made in the USA or in Mexico. For example here in Europe a Fender Stratocaster USA standart costs about 1400 dollars and a Mexican standart costs 600 dollars. In the used market, one made in the USA costs between 800/900 dollars and a Mexican made an average of 420/470 dollars. In my reality a made in the USA loses more value, however being realistic the Fender made in the USA have more quality, but knowing from Fender's own information the factory in mexico has excellent quality, what makes them cheaper is the fact that the labor is cheaper and some pieces of hardware and the finish on paint job.
Hey Kennis, you're absolutely correct in all that you're saying... I appreciate your take on this. I am getting ready to build a t-style parts-caster guitar that will have a Chinese "bootleg" Fender neck that has Fender Telecaster on it. I know it's going to be fake... It'll probably never make it to a gig of any sort. It will be played only at home and perhaps for recording (maybe at church)... But the neck tjat cost $49; and I'm waiting for it to show up from China in the coming weeks. This whole thing is new to me, and that's why I searched and found your video... (BTW, I'm subscribed now too). So anyway, I'll never sell it as a real one (I couldn't do that), but I am hoping it looks and plays nice. Just for fun... But all said, I kind of know that this whole thing is questionable. Maybe even wrong... I'm not really sure how they're getting away with it. I have real Fenders too. They are undoubtedly better. But these fakes are getting so good that it is a wonder how they do it for the price. I just got a Firefly guitar that plays absolutely amazing out to the box. It looks a bit like a Strat, and plays like a dream for only $168 delivered!!! Stay blessed and I will look forward to seeing more of your videos!
After watching the video, I understand what you meant. People are ripping others off by saying a Squier is a Fender, and that's not cool. I agree. And I did learn a lot from the video. But at the expense of kicking the hornet's nest (I know many in the comments will disagree), I see where there's confusion. The "Squier by Fender" part *is* kinda open to interpretation. Because without knowing what you explained, one can look at it and think, "Are they the same? Is one a subsect if the other? They seem related." It threw me for a loop myself, so I can understand someone looking at that logo and thinking it's a Fender. You're still 100% right that Squier and Fender are different, but I'm saying that I can't blame anyone for missing that.
I own a few guitars. One is a Squier Stratocaster. Another is a Fender Telecaster. The Strat is a REAL Stratocaster, but it is not a real FENDER Stratocaster. The Tele is a REAL Telecaster, as would be a Squier, but the difference is that it's a real FENDER Telecaster. Both are good guitars, but the difference is that I could get about $400 - $500 for the Tele, but only about $100 for the Strat. If I put a Fender logo on the Strat, it would still be a real Strat, but it would be a fake Fender.
5:55 You mean, you couldn't sell it to a music store for more than that price. You could easily sell that online with all the mods through Reverb for a considerably higher price. Music stores will only give between 50 and 65% of what they will resell that guitar for, hanging on their wall.
People get more caught up in all the marketing nonsense than in the actual instrument. They're both great guitars. My squire standard is every bit as good as my fender standard. Most of the value is in all the hype.
I have an interesting one - 1994 Fender Stratocaster Squier Series MIM - it was made with the MIM Fender electronics, and cheaper hardware. My first guitar, and it plays and sounds great - I've had other players say it sounds better than some of the American made Stratocasters of the late 90's / Early 2000s.
Correct. Squier is not Fender but is a sister company of Fender which Fender authorized to use their pickups, and body design. Squier guitars are cheaper than Fender and the high-end Squier models are much better quality than Fender player series.
I know this isn't exactly the topic of this video but I have a J mascis squier jazzmaster, a MIM JM and an american pro JM. and my experience with those particular 3 is that the MIM is my least favorite and needed the most work - sharp fret ends, bridge kept lowering by itself (I guess that's also just a problem of the JM vintage bridge in general), overly noisy pickups.. I probably just got a bit unlucky on that particular one and should have exchanged it initially. my J mascis squier is really great and didn't have any major issues, but the american one is flawless and 1-2 steps above the others in every regard. tuning stability, bridge, the trem, the pickups, the overall feel and playabilty are perfect and to me worth that money.
MIJ Fenders aren't Fenders either. I have 3; one was made by Terada and the other 2 are from the Fernandez factory. Are they fake? No. They are authorized (not just licensed.) Their intrinsic value backs their validity, using your logic. I agree, though, that if you put a Fender decal on anything other than a real Fender, you should do something to indicate that it is a replica (tribute or whatever you want to call it) I'm in Philip McKnight's camp. He puts the word "fake" on the back of the headstock. I usually put a Squier logo on the back of the headstock or a disclaimer decal that says "built from Fender and non-Fender parts" and lacquer over it so it can't be easily removed.
I remember reading that when the guys at fender first saw the products from the newly bought factory in Japan....they were blown away bc their domestic product sucked at the time and fender, as a company was ‘losing its way’. The newer classic vibe and vintage modifieds being made in Indonesia now are great guitars too. Maybe nowhere near those first Japanese models, but still I’d contend that theres little diff now between a higher end squire and mim fender, considering those higher end squires are $3-400 cheaper!
I asked my guitar teacher about the difference between MIM and a USA made guitar. The way he put it made a lot of sense. You can get a Made In Mexico for cheaper or you can get a US one that are often made by immigrant workers. It's all about making more money and the US thinking they're better than everyone...
Luhnge : good explanation but , wrong..... mex and USA fenders have similar bodies and necks, but electronics and hardware are better on USA models. Mexican bodies, usually have 3-5 piece bodies, USA, 2-3 piece bodies. Both are good guitars, but it’s not just down to the origin of the worker, or their skill level 👍
I recently bought a loaded strat body on ebay, the seller did not know for sure who made it (either squier or fender). It definitely had mim pickups, cts pots, a proper switch and a 2 point trem. The finish is metallic red. So everything I know to check makes me believe it is a mim strat body so I bought a mim strat neck and installed it. Would this be considered a fake fender?
It would be considered a "partscaster" since even though it may be built with genuine Fender parts it does not have a matching Fender serial number, and was not built by Fender. It's a grey area, but to use the oft-repeated car analogy - if you built an entire car out of only spare parts you would end up with the "real deal", except that you could not register it because it would have no VIN (chassis number) or engine number of its own. It would look like the real thing but would lack official identity. You could argue that it inherited the VIN of the donor chassis but that assumes that the donor was broken for parts, which isn't always true, and it's still not actually the same car.
Ok, a Partocaster, but is it considered a fake fender or not? Also, at what point is the partscaster line crossed? If say my pickups fried and I bought new fender replacements would my guitar then be considered a partscaster? Most would answer no but if I were to replace the neck with a licensed replacement because the original is twisted or hopelessly bowed people would say yes, that's a partscaster but truly I can see no difference between replacing pickups and replacing a twisted neck. So again I ask, where is that pesky partocaster line?
It’s not cool when people rub off Squire logo and put a Fender decal on headstock and then try to sell it.
If you do it for yourself and are honest when selling it could be forgiven. I put a fender decal on my squier jazz bass
@Boony Tooty no fender is pretty good, they're a little over priced but I can certainly imagine buying a tele for around 500 used
Squiers are no more Fender than Epiphone is Gibson. Putting a Fender logo on a Squier really just means one of two things. You're either insecure about a owning a Squier and you're trying to impress a bunch of cork sniffing gear snobs or you're up to no good and you're trying rip someone off by passing a Squier off as a Fender.
@Boony Tooty no, if people are willing to pay for it.
Boony Tooty MIJ squiers in my opinion beat most Fenders.
Because it's a Squier that someone faked into a Fender.
Is this really hard for people to understand?
Apparently. Lol
Yes, yes it is man. Common sense isn't so common these days.
Still shaking my head that it was that hard for some to understand.
Ya, ask these people would they pay the same for a guitar with Squier on the headstock as they would for one with fender on it
"Fake" here means passing something off as something that it is not. This is usually done with the intent to defraud a buyer.
The intent of the video is to keep people from being taken.
Some people just dont understand.
If you ever come across an 80's Japanese Squire then buy it they are awesome and in most cases are better sounding/ built than comparative Fender guitars of that period
Some of the "lawsuit" Japanese guitars are excellent. I have a 1978 Hondo Les Paul that I bought new and still has at least one more fret dressing left in it. Can't say the same about my Gibbo double cut made in the 90s. It needs a complete re-fret. Probably played it a bit more, but still...
JV squires were the best fender like guitars of that period. The built quality was awesome. I have bought one new back then ( fist series) and still have it
I love how a lot of people type Squier as “Squire”
Lol I did that for a long time before I purchased a squier bullet with a shorter scale, and hardtail bridge mij and a squier standard telecaster..late eighties or early nineties..
That’s cause of autocorrect
It just the difference in the way its spelled in the U.S. over how its spelled in the U.k.. The proper company name is Squier but someone in the U.K. was taught to spell it Squire. Either way is proper in writing.
@@HoosierLine noone in Britain was taught to spell it that way.Its just a common mistake
@@HoosierLine I’ve lived in America my whole life and I spell it like “squire” also for some reason. It just seems right
Really, this had to be pointed out? Duh people, ofc they are not the same. If someone sells a Squier posing as a Fender, it is a FAKE Fender. If the logo needs to be altered to make it a “Fender”, that should tell you it is not the real deal.
I have a Squire Classic Vibe Tele & it’s amazing! People have done blindfold comparisons online with custom shop Fenders & Classic Vibe squires & they can’t tell the difference!
Yes. Those are amazing guitars. I wish I had one.
Kennis Russell I just got one a little over a month ago, the Squier CV Custom Tele 60s. It is indeed a very nice guitar. Super light, too. I did replace the nut with a GraphTec nut, but, other than that, definitely no complaints.
Yeah the Squier Classic Vibes are so much better than most ( bone nut, no fret sprout, etc) MIMs but if somebody put a fender logo on it then it is still fake. much like if somebody took a MIM Fender and put a squier logo on it instead then that would be a fake squier guitar....not that anybody would do that. i would be pissed if i bought what i thought was a classic vibe squier but it turned out to be a MIM Fender I would be pissed.
Me too! But so what? Who is arguing? How is this relevant? Did you spend $1500 or $2500 on it thinking you were getting a USA Fender only to get it home and realize the it was a Classic Vibe with a fake logo put on it? Guessing not. Kennis has never said Squiers can't be good guitars, only that if someone slaps on a Fender logo and sells it as a Fender, it's a fake.
@@ransombaggins9301 Dude never said anyone was arguing. Just mentioned in passing that Squier CVs are quality. Relax.
That's 20 minutes of my life I won't get back, watch it back Kennis, you gibber on through the video without actually explaining what you mean. You could have done it in 2 minutes
You could use this video as a way to marvel in video internet technology.
I can't believe you actually have to go in depth to explain what you meant. The lack of common sense humanity has baffles more each day....
I started playing say, 3 months ago, I want to get a real McCoy; hey presto!
It's a language barrier with people from other countries
You are so right about people changing decals and trying pass off a lesser brand as a premium brand. I own and play live with two Squier guitars, but I always tell people the guitars are the Squier brand. Enjoyed your video.
"Fender" parts don't necessarily fit on a Squier. The specs and tolerances are slightly different.
I learned that trying to put fender pup covers on my squier
@@mykemech It depends on the Squier. But yes, big compatibility issues on some guitars.
Fender parts don't necessarily fit on a Fender either.
@@Subcat001 Actually the narrower spaced neck/middle pickup poles on cheaper Squiers are a better design than on a Fender and would arguably be an upgrade.
I hate when people sell a "Fender Squier" guitar online, it's not a fender
It really is fender but some parts are lower quality fender makes them and even though it's a squire by fender it's still a fender.
I know, man. It drives me nuts. To me, I always feel like theyre trying to fool someone who doesnt know their stuff and thinks its a real Fender.
seriously one of my biggest pet peeves. You wouldn't sell a Smart Car as a BMW, even though it's the same company. That would be fraud, unfortunately in the Squier/Fender case it's more of a matter of ignorance than malice.
Its a Fender
Why do you hate it? They just want you to find it, looking for a Fender.
I'm proud of my 95 squier. I know it's not as good compared to a mia strat, but to me it's good. Sounds good and feels really nice.
@marko i agree with you on the pricing. Although as of the last couple years, everything increased in pricing especially with fender and its subsidiaries. The 95 squier i have my parents bought when quality was still decent on squiers. Now i dont buy squiers new. I've only bought used. I had a squier 2 end of run. I got it for $120. So used is the way to go on squiers.
There's a lot you can do with a Squier to make it play comfortably and sound just as good as a Fender.
@@caerparavel Yeah and it's called practice until you can actually play the guitar. It doesn't matter what is on the headstock or the price. People give up trying to learn the electric guitar because they think that buying an expensive guitar is going to make them a better player that is stupid and it ain't going to happen if you don't dedicate the time to learn.
*Squier IS a Fender.*
I'd be more inclined to put a fake Squier logo on my Fender, so it's less likely to be stolen at a gig
I have a Squire Affinity Tele. I slapped in a set of used MIM pickups and wow what a difference. Squires are a good platform for mods.
I hav a starcaster , changed the hardware . New loaded pickguard . Not bad at all .
I agree. That’s not a bad guitar.
I’ve got one that plays amazing. New pickups, and it sounds better than my buddy’s stock MIM Strat.
Right on Tom. There's nothing wrong at all with that. If your happy with it that's all that matters
I keep a lookout for them - cheap for a modding platform, and it has the70s head shape that I like
I have one and am not so lucky. Mines dreadful I even put new pickups and tuners and it just simply sucks. It's a shame
Fully understand what you say. It’s a quality thing. But trying to pass off a Squier as a fender to sell is a fake operation.
These questions are dumb. They're more or less asking "why can't a fake be real?"
Because guitar players generally stupid idiots, that cant change a broken string let alone form a logical thought
jackassess don't know they're jackassess! 😂
It really couldn't be simpler. If the logo is 'Squire' it's not a Fender even though it says 'made by Fender"
My brother's wife's previous husband (who passed away) had a starcaster that was decked out really nice, she let me have it and an ibanez pf5 acoustic.
Granted, it's no fender, but it still beats the super cheap brands like crescent.
9:40 Jeff healey has played live a japanese squier stratocaster on a stage.
Indigo David Pearson regularly plays a Bullet.
A BULLET!
Squier isn't made by fender at all, they are designed by fender! My Squier is made by Cortek in Indonesia, its a nice guitar but it isn't made by fender!
There's some china built Fenders, are they Fenders or not? I think they are.
Squier is in the Fender family of products regardless of which factory Fender has subcontracted to build the product to their specs.
Yup and I've never had a bad Cort but, I've had a bad Fender😎
@@testtube1195 chinese built Fenders, I've missed that, are you sure?
@@TheMikeharris7 in the same way that Ferrari are owned by FIAT....but I'd never say my FIAT 500 was a Fezza😎
I love the Mexican strats. Its pretty much the same guitar as the American standard but half the price. Not for a collector or a seller but if you just want to play it, they are hard to beat
I will say that early 80's Japanese Squiers with the JV and SQ serial numbers are very nice instruments. I love my SQ P-bass and Telecaster. A pickup swap and a refret to 6105s made the Tele perfect. Not that there was anything wrong with the existing fretwork, I just prefer bigger frets over tiny vintage ones.
Wow, people are so defensive, no one is saying your Squiers suck or they're not a company owned by Fender, but clearly Squiers are the lower end of what Fender makes, removing the logo and slapping a Fender logo on there like it's a higher end version of that guitar is being deceitful. It's trying to fool people into believing you have a higher end model, which, who cares, unless you're going to sell that as a "Fender". It is not a Fender, it is a Squier "by Fender". It's wrong to do that, just don't be wrong.
QueeferSutherland If I comment on Squiers (which I have in this comments section), its not as a defensive thing, its to profess my love for them haha. I’d argue that a lot of MIM fenders aren’t any better than, say, a classic vibe squier, all the same. Because of the huge price gap though, yea....its despicable to see anyone selling a $400 instrument for $800 or something like that. Ppl that do that should be locked up.
Fender is magical, the guitar world has twisted knickers over their instruments, amateurs and pros alike. However, i have never heard a voice as sweet as an American made Fender Stratocaster and its relatives. I do however want a guitar from every quality maker because i have listened to their songs and have been made to realize that quality in craftsmanship is a must but the differences in sound is what we chase. May the chase continue.
i've always almost gotten off on the fact i'll play an early Squire Silver Series Tele on stage, (rarely, as i'm a bassist) but squire have done some amazing stuff over the years, this one plays simply incredibly, though it's had 30 years to get this way lol but i still love the shock when other players pick up my "Squire" only to see how it plays...
however, even though it is essentially a fender, strait off the fender Japan production line, with a top load bridge being the only deviation from a 91 fender japan tele, if i were to change the headstock over to a fender logo, it'd 100% be a fake fender, no questios asked...
I dare you to take a Fender and put a Squier sticker on it. That way it won't be stolen. After all, it's just pieces of wood. Amazing how we put value on dead things. Are you sure that replacement bass neck is really manufactured by Fender?
This is what I’m going to say if it plays and sounds good I don’t care about the brand only thing some people pay for is a little printed sticker on a headstock sometimes. So I don’t care what it is. As long as it’s a great instrument you should use it.
The problem is that people take Squire guitars and try to sell them for the price of a legit Fender instrument
THIS!!!!!
William Charles Schneider Squier
i have a squier guitar, already upgraded the whole guitar part. when I play the fender player series guitar, it sounds less good compared to the upgraded squier guitar.
I bought a Starcaster at my local Music-Go-Round for $100 a few years ago specifically in order to do an extreme mod/upgrade to my specs. I hand made a custom extended brushed stainless steel pick guard loaded with 3 quad rail/coil humbuckers and wired it like a '50's Les Paul with coil splits. That does mean it has 3 pairs of control pots. all 500k ohm audio taper. 3 P/P vol. and 2 regular tone pots with a P/P in the bridge tone position to activate the bridge and neck pickups together regardless of any other controls. and the splits still work either way. I upgraded to a Fender 5-Way blade switch, upgraded the sustain block to a full size brass block added roller saddles to the bridge as well and floated it while tuning the 9-46 stings to E-Flat standard like any good Strat should be tuned the headstock . I oriented the pickups so that the active coils are toward the bridge when coil split. since the pickups have 4 smaller coils, 1 each for the rails and have 3 very powerful ceramic magnets between the bottoms of the rails below the bottom plates which the rails are soldered to. they are wired in pairs start and finish for north and south, having 5 wires. 1 braded main ground the the other fo mentioned earlier. As the actual output of [pickups is so minimal, measuring in mere millivolts, I used thin stranded wire that i stripped out of a computer VGA cable for the sizes and colors to both save space in a very crowded control cavity and because that's all that is really needed for the limited power from the pickups. after a few false starts with the wiring of so many connections in the control circuit and finally getting it all correctly routed through the circuit it all works as designed and sounds out of this world. the stars and planets space themed paint job on the body and head stock lends to its new name--- The "Stellarcaster" a bit further out from Stratocaster and then the Starcaster on out to the Stellarcaster, My new custom creation. Wanna Play???
What drives me nuts is that when you search fender on Reverb or EBay 85% of the results are Squier. Fender did make a Squier series Stratocaster in the mid 90’s MIM, I had one and it was junk compared to the used regular MIM Stratocaster from the year before in my house.
ikwym
i usually go
low to high price search now
and eventually around page 25
the squirrel guitars Squier Strats
are not filling every position on the search .
I bought four different guitars at different times from the same local pawnshop and each time hung a $150 fake Fender Stratocaster which i KNEW it wasn't what it was disguised to be but the top-loading hardtail bridge stayed on my mind that i got it for $75. First thing I did was detach the neck to check the date and that's when I discovered that the Strat was a Indonesia made 2002 Squier Bullet. What looked like a rosewood fingerboard as I was cleaning it turned out to be a stained Indian Laurel fingerboard and then i removed the fret end sprouts, cleaned up the jagged edges on the painted headstock as well as the painted-over tuner bushings and after putting new strings on and providing neck relief, then i began w/the following: I did a 5-way switch swap replacing the faulty side lug switch (only 1 & 5 worked) for an inline, put on a wider spaced Tusq nut, a triple string tree and currently replacing the pickups for better aftermarket ones.
Side note Ron Thorn the principal master builder at Fender's custom shop mentioned in an interview recently that his #1 guitar is an 80's MIJ Squier. :)
he ........... does not know that is fender is a company name, squire in one of its models...dee.....deee...deee...........see models USA. mim. mij , squire , starcaster , strat , hwy , tx , affinity , standard , tele , jackson, pc1, others..........
Hey Kennis, I think the problem is that people aren't getting your point. I understand what your saying. That there are people out there taking Squier guitars (or Fender style headstock guitars) sanding off the Brand name and putting the Fender Brand logo and trying to sell them as "REAL" American made or even MIM guitars. I'm also on eBay and reverb and Letgo and so on and seen so many fakes. I was at a pawn shop once and they were selling a fake Gibson for $700. I even pointed it out and they thought I didn't know what i was talking about. People need to understand that when buying a used guitar you need to have some knowledge of the instrument. I get cautious when I only see three pics of the guitar that they are selling online. Usually, they don't show the headstock. That to me is a sign of a fake. But they also can be bad at taking pictures too. When trying to buy a guitar I ask questions and ask for more CLEAR pictures of the guitar.
Starcaster was the first guitar i ever learned on how to play, & it made me feel really happy getting into guitar, hence the username :>
Sunburst maple fret board haha
Same with me! My first electric guitar was the Starcaster and honestly it was one of my favourite guitars. Then my guitar teacher said it played like crap and tried to "fix" the action on it now rendering it unplayable coz now I get a whole lot a ✨ fretbuzz ✨
I plan to mod it in the future with some Seymour Duncan's and new tremolo but I really hate when people give cheap guitars a lot of crap.
Lol check back in with me in a few months to see how the modding is going lol
I love my Squier Strat. It’s my goto guitar. Great tones and plays really well. Its a 94 model and aged really well. Must have been made on a Tuesday or Thursday.
My old Japanese Squier has fender stamps on the bridge and tuners and was made from the same body and neck as a Fender would have been at the time, with the only difference being the electronics (which I've since replaced). Close enough to a Fender?
I can't believe people could not figure out what you were saying in your first video and having to explain to them like they were five.
Not all squires are made equal. The Squire JV early 80s models were great Japanese Strats and hold their value to the USA made ones.
I love my starcaster.modded it with a tusq nut, I lock the strings at the tuners and put a set of roller saddles and a 12 $ chinese pickup and its awesome. I'm not paying for a grand for a brand name. Besides, the tone is in your fingers and amp
That's just the kind of upgrades I've done on my squiers that I had. Not difficult but the results are great.
Hey, VW owns Rolls Royce, so all those Beetles with those phony Rolls grilles on them are real Rolls Royces by these people's criteria.
No, BMW owns Rolls Royce.....VW owns Bentley....but anyway....😋
@@darrenharriss8972 You got the point :P But yeah, you could put a Porsche body kit on top of a universal VW undercarriage used for a Beetle (ps. I had a colleague that modded his Beetle that way. Looked awesome! Sounded absolutely f*king horrific with the original VW engine)
@@forkless There used to be companies that advertised in car magazines in the 60's that offered exactly that same idea in a kit. You could buy the kit, strip your bug and a few days later have a whole new car. Still felt, sound and drive like a beetle, but it looked better.
My favorites were the new hoods and things you could get to turn your bug into a Rolls Royce. Absolutely wonderful, imaginative stuff.
Chevrolet and Cadillac, same company. Can you put a caddy logo on a Chevy? Same thing
yes you can. wont make it a Chevy but yes you can.
Us fender, mim and mij fender and squier have slightly different dimensions, string spacing being the main one. You will run into this when you try to upgrade squiers with fender parts or to repair a fender with parts from china.
Very true.
Jazzmaster tremolos are a good example. Squier uses unbranded trems without a block button. They weigh in at 275g and have 50mm string spacing. A import / mij trem weighs the same and has the same string spacing but has the fender logo and a block button. A US trem however weighs about 320g and has a string spacing of 56mm. The steel is slightly thicker at places, the string holes are smoother, thentremolo bar collet is tighter. The differences ate not huge, but if you have them side by side you notice them. And if you upgrade a squier jazzmaster with a US trem but keep the original bridge you will find you have a tad more binding at the saddles and a just a bit more tuning stability issues. Fender is sneaky that way.
There are some MIC Squier's that accept Fender MIM parts, and have a full sized body.
Great points and I figured you were going with this route, but the title was kinda misleading.
"Squier is NOT Fender" implies that they are two separate entities when really it's a subdivision of Fender's line.
Better title name: *When* a Squier is NOT a Fender.
I have a "partscaster", it has Fender machine heads, Fender wiring harness, Fender string trees,
DiMarzio pick ups & even a stratocaster water slide with the Fender name removed.
I might even get a Fender neck on it one day.
IF ! I ever sell it, I obviously would NOT be trying to pass it off as a Fender, because it's not, even though it plays and sounds comparable to a Fender.
Common sense isn't it?
There is too much guitar snobbery, I have over twenty guitars, they all play and sound different, but one my favourites to play is Squier Custom Telecaster, I find the tone suits my needs fine and it is well finished, it plays beautifully, the only mod I made was a screw on jack socket/cup. I have mostly teles, not all fenders, I even have one that says Gibson on the headstock, but I never for a minute thought that it was a Gibson.
Stewart McDonald Amen to that.
Squier is essentially licensed by Fender. Fender says make this guitar cheaper and easier and we will add our name to it. Most people can’t spend $2,000+ for a guitar but they can spend $700 or so for a similar guitar.
Yes, except that most expensive new Squier have never been above $400-450. Some desirable older ones can sell in the $700 range though.
Mine is one of the Squiers in the top end of Squiers, which is to say, it’s not hard to find Fender owners happy to hawk and spit on my prized possession! However...as others point out, they are actually a different beast, while certainly being able to sound similar depending on a multitude of things, including whether you are willing to accept that a $300 guitar can in any way be a substitute for a Made-in-America ‘actual’ Fender instrument. I am glad of the lighter weight, the slightly smaller and slimmer (I think) body, and so on. I drove 200 miles to get the only Candy Apple Red one in the country for sale at the time (UK), and it just means a whole lot to me, whether it’s a ‘real’ Fender or not, it is as usable and as wonderful to me, as any classic ‘real’ Fender costing 10 times as much, is to a seasoned musician/guitarist. If it were not for the creation of ‘Squier’ I wouldn’t have a Fender-style guitar of the quality I have. That for me, would be a shame! Everyone’s quite protective of their chosen instrument I think, it wouldn’t take much to start a brawl, so I try not to. It’s kind of akin to issuing forth with a sudden declaration of an opinion about someone’s children, that’s how emotive it can be. I’d go a long way to not appear to be looking down on someone else’s choice of instrument, it’s quite a close relationship!
[EDIT - PS don’t try to negotiate a price down of your chosen guitar, because it was on display, after you told the guy you drove 200 miles to see this particular, specific, individual guitar. I know, you could foresee that as a barrier to getting a bargain...and it does not bother me at all, I just wanted to secure that particular instrument. I’ll never be able to do it justice, I just love playing it.]
Hi there, great video! Since the topic of the video is about Squier branded instruments, there are some interesting facts about it: of course, those of us hip to fender history are aware of the Japanese squiers of the eighties. These guitars and basses are now almost as coveted as the Japanese Fender branded instruments, due to the excellent build quality (and I believe they were also produced on the same assembly lines at times). There’s also the strange case of Korean made Fender instruments and Mexican made Squier instruments, as well as the Fender branded instruments with Fender decals on the headstocks that were marketed in the “Squier series”.
By the by, I would like to mention that I own a couple of Squier instruments, both of which I’ve completely replaced every part save for the body and neck, and have put the fender decal on the front of the headstock. Essentially, these instruments are now almost completely custom to my taste for studio and live performance. Likewise, I built a bass with a Squier body and an MIM fender neck that I dearly love. HOWEVER, even though I’ve put the fender decals on, I have kept the Squier serial numbers. If ever I sell these instruments (which to be honest I doubt I will, though that’s regardless to the main point), I will put them up for sale as squiers with heavy modification. It doesn’t matter that I put custom shop pickups in them, high end electronics, and really nice hardware, they’re still Squier made instruments at their core. Exception of course would be the partscaster I did with the Squier body and fender neck, because that does have a fender neck with a fender serial on it.
Well Squier guitars are basically cheap Fenders but that doesn't mean that Squier also is Fender. They produce basically licensed copies of the original. Yes it says Squier by Fender but at the back of the headstock it also says "Designed and backed by Fender" which just means they are using the designs that Fender provides and are allowed to do that, therefore are legitimate copies.
Well said.
@@kennisrussell Thank you
Interested to know your opinion on the Squier Vista series from 1996-1998. The Jagmaster, Super Sonic and Venus from those years were made in the same Fender Japan factory and right along side the fender Mustangs, Jaguars and Jazzmasters that were imported to america in those years as the Fender Classic Series. Exact same parts, build quality, literally everything except the sticker.
Japan Squiers are amazing in my opinion.
jacking up the price of an instrument by changing a cheap name for a high dollar logo and selling for more $ is called theft.
It's called fraud😎
Playing on stage with a Squire is like showing up at Sturgis on a Chinese motorcycle.
There are a disturbing number of people who feel the "faking" is fair play.. A sign of the times.
Saying that because Fender owns Squire means a Squire is a Fender is like saying an Escort is the same as a Continental because Ford owns Lincoln.
It's fake Strat. People say "Squire Strat", but that's not a thing. It looks like a Strat, it quacks like a Strat. But it's a Squire something, not a Strat. Having said that, Fender don't make the best Strat shaped guitar, but they do make the only one legitimately labeled Stratocaster.
Thanks fella.
I disagree. A squier Stratocaster is a Stratocaster, it is legally called a strat but its not a *fender* strat.
it would be the case if squier had nothing to do with fender, but it certainly does
Very good video. I just bought a Squire with a Fender logo. I thought it was a great deal for 100$. Turned out to not be the case. Very disappointing. Your knowledge and explanation was very helpful. Thank you.
I have a Starcaster by fender from 2004 that I just modified with all official American fender parts. Is it still fake?
it's kind of hard to believe you had to explain this, but not everyone has been around guitars for the last fifty years like some of us.
There are loads of beginners out there, and many more unscrupulous people. A video pointing out that loads of people are out there to rip you off and explaining that in simple terms is good for them. If you you don't need that advice, don't watch the video. With the rise of Facebook marketplace, counterfeiting is on the up. If you bother to watch the video, Ken is trying to protect consumers and has no problem with any guitar that you may choose to play, or how it's labelled. Just don't sell it as a legit Fender if it's not.
My 95 MIM Stratocaster was made in California. In 1994 the plant in Mexico burned down and all MIM strats from late 94-95 are made in California.
Didn’t know they were made in Cali. I’ve got one of those myself... it’s an absolute beast! Showed a pic of it to a guy at guitar center to see what he might give me for it, he said that’s not a squier that’s a player🤣
Had to blow the picture up on the headstock for him to see, anyway thanks for the info
All the people who own Squires are going to say that they are legitimate Fenders because they don't want to admit its an inferior product. For an extra $100 you could buy a Korean made or Mexican made Fender that is a real Fender. I own a mik strat and I love it dearly. Plays insane.
Lucy Fuir Not here in Canada, you can’t. Ppl sell mim fenders for alot more $ used than a new cv/vm squier, simply bc its ‘Fender’. That ‘$100 more’ bit.....might’ve been true a few years back, but not any more. I’ve tried out just as many mim ‘duds’ as indonesian squiers. I’ve got a US tele that has string ferrules falling out the back when I change strings, no matter what I do (which is nuts considering it was a $1k guitar) and I’ve seen mim strats/teles/jazz basses/etc with almost the same ‘crappy bridges and tuners’ you’d find on a squier affinity. I own examples of mim/us fender, chinese/indonesian squier and I can honestly say I love all of em, none of them are really that far apart in terms of quality. I’m at a point now where I’d consider it silly to spend $1k or more on a US Fender just for the brand name......I just bought a squier classic vibe 70’s strat for around $400 though, and lemme tell ya: this guitar plays and sounds as good as any mia fender strat I’ve ever played. If I’m being really picky, I might upgrade the saddles on the bridge and put a tort pickguard on it....for a few dollars, and it’ll be perfect for my needs. For anyone who knows how to set up a guitar and has fun doing that kind of stuff.....just buy a squier and save a hilarious amount of money.
So is my Fender a Squier? Is my Lexus a Toyota? Is my hamburger a steak? Lol
How did you make the custom logo?
I designed it in photoshop. There is a company that England that prints amazing water slides. I will be making a video on that soon.
@@kennisrussell Thank you very much. I'll have to find someone with some photo shop skills I suppose then. I would love my own custom logo for my partscaster but I have no skills in that area ha
i want old Arbor decals .
Obviously from the direction of the comments on your previous video people did not get your intention. Suffice to say, if you change the headstock logo on any guitar to a more expensive guitar logo with the intention of fooling someone into paying more for a cheaper guitar than its value it's a fake. And the person who does so is despicable and corrupt.
The 2016 "Squier" *Skullcaster* Haruna Ono (Scandal) Signature model is labeled a Squier® but technically it .is a Fender. That specific run of 300 units are pretty much all Fender parts specs. The first run in 2014 were made to be beginner guitars. The 2nd run though the build was completely changed with different paint, shielding bridge pickups etc. at the request of the artist.
Having worked with the band at the time *Haru* wanted the guitar to be closer to what she actually plays. The design was changed. A compromise was made To keep it in the same price range as the 2014s the company band branded case was deleted & the guitar sold by itself only. The only reason the 2016s had a Squier ® logo on the headstock was the band's sponsored contract said it had too. I
I have had many techs look at the guitar and 100% have said it is better quality than an Ameican made Tele. There are exceptions to the rule. I know this is a rare case but sometimes labels aren't what they mean.
Looking at one on eBay I see it has an ICS prefix on the serial number which means Indonesian Cort Squier. That is a Cor-tek built guitar.
@@madmat2001 ...for fender company
he ........... does not know that is fender company name, squire in one of its models...dee.....deee...deee...........see models USA. mim. mij , squire , starcaster , strat , hwy , tx , affinity , standard , tele , jackson, pc1, others..........
My pet peave is when people call it a "Fender Squier" like they're trying to make it sound more impressive buy putting the word Fender in front of it. Just own the fact that you have a Squier. I'll be far more impressed by something that says Squier on the headstock and plays amazingly than you someone telling me it's a Fender Squier
It is a Fender Squier... if the seller was sold and marketed a guitar, branded ‘squier by Fender’ , they have every right to sell it on, as - squier by fender..... look on the fender website, they sell ..... squiers on there , whether it annoys you or not, is irrelevant , the seller is doing nothing wrong
No issue with "Squier by Fender". It's a really petty, irrational hatred of people specifically saying "Fender Squier" in the same way you'd say "Fender Stratocaster" or "Fender Telecaster"
Someone saying that a Squier is a Fender is like someone saying that a Tudor is a Rolex.
NOPE!
OMG that $125 dollar 1971 /1994 Fender jazz bass is incredible. I LOVE the beat up look, too. I'm a sucker for real road worn basses. That means it's GOOD. I don't trust a pristine bass as much.
Hi, I was given a strat like guitar that was all beat up and neglected in a basement for years to the point of being rusty. It had a fender logo bridge but the remainder of the guitar was very suspect. It had a no name replacement neck. I took it all apart, cleaned it up, sanded down all the dings and dents and put it back together and found that this no-name neck was perfect and I could set the action nice and low with perfect intonation. I loved this guitar for its playability, but it sounded a bit weak and was one guitar too many so I traded it for a Donner Bass, which is a low cost guitar, but also vey playable and sounds good in a Fender amp. Just goes to show that logos don't necessarily make a great guitar, unless it plays nicely.....Ken
Yea...I have owned a couple of both...love them all...
Couple of thoughts: I know a guy who, as a hobby, assembles guitars. Sometimes Chinese kits, sometimes total legit parts casters, using Fender parts or Fender licensed stuff. Never a head stock logo.... On the back of the headstock he uses a wood burning tool to sign it, assign it a #,to spell out in one inch tall letters "COPY"......
If you ask, he'll give you a build sheet so you know what you are buying...
Kennis Russell...In fact Fender only makes Fender guitars in two factories, one in the USA and one in Mexico...so a Squier is not made by Fender even if it says"by Fender'' on the headstock...The Fender Musical Instruments Company (FMIC), who owns the Fender brand, Squier brand EVH brand, Gretsch brand to name just a few, has Squier guitars made by Yako Musical instruments LTD in China under contract...and before Yako got the contract...Squiers were built in the Cort Guitars is a South Korean guitar manufacturing company located in Seoul. The company is one of the largest guitar makers in the world, and produces instruments for many other companies including Epiphone... Cort also has factories in Indonesia and China...In short, a Squier is not made by Fender Guitars and Fender guitars don't own Squier...FMIC owns both brands and Squiers will always be built by the company who bids the lowest for the contract to build them but rest assured that they will not be built in the USA , Mexico, by Fender guitar employees or in a Fender factory...and Mighty Mite Licensed neck is not a Fender neck...Mighty Mite pays a Licensing fee to FMIC for the right to use the Trade Mark protected headstock shape...but it does not imply in any way that the quality is on par,better or worse than a real fender neck...just saying..
I'm not even watching the whole thing, I just came to upvote the fact that Squier is not Fender. It was Fender, it would say Fender on the headstock, not Squier by Fender.
There are some guitars that are a Fender Squier series, made in the 80s until the late 90s. I have one - it's a 1993 made in Mexico, utilizing the same electronics as the MIM Fender Stratocaster from that year, with cheaper hardware.
I do appreciate your care in wording.
For those who are not aware, Squier stringed instruments date back to the 1890. Fender purchased the company in 1965. Leo founded Fender in 1947. Squier is the old man here. That does not mean they are better than the Fullerton Fenders. However the history is much longer.
Fender does own Squier Guitars. As such, the Fender line is authorised for construction to Squier by Fender. It does not mean they are Built by Fender. Just Authorised.
On the subject of Mexican Fenders. The oddball idea that they are less than the Fullerton Players Series Fenders is hilarious. The Mexican Fender guitar plant is less than 200 miles (186 miles) from the Fullerton plant. So maybe its just patriotism that Made In America somehow makes them "better". Now I did say *Players Series*....not Custom Shop. You cannot compare Custom Shop guitars to anything else made by Fender, Fullerton, Mexico or Squier.
I dont know much about Japanese Fenders to comment on the quality of those, or where they are ultimately made and why Japanese Fenders are unique and cannot be found Stateside unless you have it shipped.
In short.....like the guy with bad grammar
It no matter if play good 🎉
I have a mim Strat that I decided to do a colour change. After removing the original finish I discovered that the body was made up of 9 pieces of scrap wood glue together. Disappointed.
My Squier PJ bass rules! Don't think I'll ever get rid of it.
That's what I like about Rickenbacker. They never came with a subbrand to sell lower quality versions of their guitars and basses.
One of my favorite strats ever is the recent black Squier Bullet that has the HSS configuration and the sparkle pickguard. The neck on that thing played amazingly well. Sadly, the electronics aren't great, but it's a REALLY cheap instrument that looks more impressive at first glance than many Fenders. It just has that look that I love. You could get one new for 130 bucks (might still be able to) but I think I got mine used for like 70 or 80. I left it with a teacher since he didn't have one in his classroom studio. However, I'd play one of those things in full stadiums with no guilt. It didn't sound as good as many guitars, but it felt amazing to play and looked great. I've played a few MiM Strats that actually felt worse to play and (to be fair due to having only single coils) sounded worse for what I play. On the other hand, the best strat I've ever played was a Mexican Strat with a Carvin pickup in the bridge. In conclusion, I don't know what my point was but guitars are cool.
I purchased a Squier Candy Apple Red body, doesn't have a assembly number, no neck plate, pickguard or electronics. I am rebuilding it as a Super Squier with Seymour Duncan Distortion HSS pickups, Babicz Bridge and Warmoth maple /maple neck with Fender locking tuners.
When I bought the body, it was advertised as Squier Classic Vibe 70s, how would I know?
For those who say they have Squires, they're fakes...for those who have Squiers, they're not and in many cases are as good as USA Fenders at a fraction of the cost. Check your headstock logo Squire owners! Pedantic?...yes, but accurate.
I checked out one of those 70s vibe squires and a new bullet. Hoping my kids would get involved. I have a schecter and build guitars so have a few customs. You know I've gravitated to using their guitars lately. Shhhh don't tell anyone I'm using a Squire lol. Nah just kidding. I'm actually kind of impressed. The 70s vibe is amazing. The bullet is a bullet. It's not bad dont get me wrong. I'm actually impressed for $120 brand new pfttt it's amazing too. I dig the sound it makes
Bought an Epiphone LP Special II, 20 years ago 2 months in electronics went haywire took to shop where I purchased it tech got into the display where the Gibson parts were 4 hours later my Epi had Original Gibson Les Paul pick-ups and toggle switch. So is it Epi or Gibson now?
The term "fake guitar" is so dumb.
A guitar is still a guitar.
*"Wait a minute... This guitar was a trumpet all along!"*
Incorrect. This was a trombone. Its all in the details.
It's actually a drumkit
Fender dusted off the Starcaster name in the early 2000s for an entire line of value-priced, entry-level instruments sold at Cost co. These “Starcaster by Fender” guitars and drums, however, had nothing to do with the original Starcaster guitar, which has undergone something of a rehabilitation. In 2013, due to rising demand, Fender reintroduced the Starcaster, the Coronado, and put into production the extremely rare Starcaster bass-the only offset semi-hollow bass guitar in Fender history.
A huge difference between a Squire, MIM, and US Strats is materials. Frets, pickup magnets and wire, woods, bridges, etc, it all adds up and makes a difference in both quality and price. That doesn't mean a cheap guitar can't play well or sound good though. My cheap acoustic is awesome, but it's frets wear really fast due to cheap material used.
I have one of the early Squier Stratocasters sold to me at Manny’s Guitars in Manhattan in 1984 - from the low serial number appears to be the first batch from the original Fender Japan production. I was surprised to see how much worse the quality was on more recent ones made in other countries.
John Watson the first squire series from ‘82 were the best. All the later series and all USA made fenders were of lesser quality.
What model of Squier are you comparing it to a Bullet, Affinity, Standard, or Classic Vibe? Today, there are many versions of a Squier Stratocaster. It does make a difference.
I got a squire for $174. The wiring was ridiculous and a pickup was so crappy, it doesn't work anymore. Bridge and neck pickups work, I got new ones.
Modded it up. It is now my best guitar. Some Squires are considered for top 10 lists of best guitars (do a youtube search of top 10 guitars). When I see Strats in stores, they are between $3,000- $7,000.
I was never able to afford one.
What if you take a Fender professional series and put a Squire water slide on it. Would everyone be in a uproar?
I’ve actually know at least one person who put a Squier logo on an American Fender. He did it because he plays a lot of bars where guitars tend to disappear if you turn your back, and people are less likely to steal a Squier.
However, if he tries to sell that guitar at some point he will have to make an effort to prove that it is a Fender and not an upgraded Squier.
@@charlesbolton8471 See that is a perfect example. If I was a gigging musician I would buy that guitar.
Hello. Congratulations on the channel. I don't agree with the argument regarding the value of guitars made in the USA or in Mexico. For example here in Europe a Fender Stratocaster USA standart costs about 1400 dollars and a Mexican standart costs 600 dollars. In the used market, one made in the USA costs between 800/900 dollars and a Mexican made an average of 420/470 dollars.
In my reality a made in the USA loses more value, however being realistic the Fender made in the USA have more quality, but knowing from Fender's own information the factory in mexico has excellent quality, what makes them cheaper is the fact that the labor is cheaper and some pieces of hardware and the finish on paint job.
Hey Kennis, you're absolutely correct in all that you're saying... I appreciate your take on this. I am getting ready to build a t-style parts-caster guitar that will have a Chinese "bootleg" Fender neck that has Fender Telecaster on it. I know it's going to be fake... It'll probably never make it to a gig of any sort. It will be played only at home and perhaps for recording (maybe at church)... But the neck tjat cost $49; and I'm waiting for it to show up from China in the coming weeks. This whole thing is new to me, and that's why I searched and found your video... (BTW, I'm subscribed now too). So anyway, I'll never sell it as a real one (I couldn't do that), but I am hoping it looks and plays nice. Just for fun... But all said, I kind of know that this whole thing is questionable. Maybe even wrong... I'm not really sure how they're getting away with it. I have real Fenders too. They are undoubtedly better. But these fakes are getting so good that it is a wonder how they do it for the price. I just got a Firefly guitar that plays absolutely amazing out to the box. It looks a bit like a Strat, and plays like a dream for only $168 delivered!!! Stay blessed and I will look forward to seeing more of your videos!
After watching the video, I understand what you meant. People are ripping others off by saying a Squier is a Fender, and that's not cool. I agree. And I did learn a lot from the video.
But at the expense of kicking the hornet's nest (I know many in the comments will disagree), I see where there's confusion. The "Squier by Fender" part *is* kinda open to interpretation. Because without knowing what you explained, one can look at it and think, "Are they the same? Is one a subsect if the other? They seem related." It threw me for a loop myself, so I can understand someone looking at that logo and thinking it's a Fender.
You're still 100% right that Squier and Fender are different, but I'm saying that I can't blame anyone for missing that.
I own a few guitars. One is a Squier Stratocaster. Another is a Fender Telecaster. The Strat is a REAL Stratocaster, but it is not a real FENDER Stratocaster. The Tele is a REAL Telecaster, as would be a Squier, but the difference is that it's a real FENDER Telecaster. Both are good guitars, but the difference is that I could get about $400 - $500 for the Tele, but only about $100 for the Strat. If I put a Fender logo on the Strat, it would still be a real Strat, but it would be a fake Fender.
So what if I’m slapping all Fender parts in a Squire? Does it give me a excuse to put a fender logo on it
5:55 You mean, you couldn't sell it to a music store for more than that price. You could easily sell that online with all the mods through Reverb for a considerably higher price. Music stores will only give between 50 and 65% of what they will resell that guitar for, hanging on their wall.
People get more caught up in all the marketing nonsense than in the actual instrument. They're both great guitars. My squire standard is every bit as good as my fender standard. Most of the value is in all the hype.
I have an interesting one - 1994 Fender Stratocaster Squier Series MIM - it was made with the MIM Fender electronics, and cheaper hardware. My first guitar, and it plays and sounds great - I've had other players say it sounds better than some of the American made Stratocasters of the late 90's / Early 2000s.
Correct. Squier is not Fender but is a sister company of Fender which Fender authorized to use their pickups, and body design. Squier guitars are cheaper than Fender and the high-end Squier models are much better quality than Fender player series.
I know this isn't exactly the topic of this video but I have a J mascis squier jazzmaster, a MIM JM and an american pro JM. and my experience with those particular 3 is that the MIM is my least favorite and needed the most work - sharp fret ends, bridge kept lowering by itself (I guess that's also just a problem of the JM vintage bridge in general), overly noisy pickups.. I probably just got a bit unlucky on that particular one and should have exchanged it initially. my J mascis squier is really great and didn't have any major issues, but the american one is flawless and 1-2 steps above the others in every regard. tuning stability, bridge, the trem, the pickups, the overall feel and playabilty are perfect and to me worth that money.
You came up as a suggestion checkout in 30 seconds because i wanted to actually see the content i clicked on
Sorry about that. Thanks for taking the time to comment and let me know.
MIJ Fenders aren't Fenders either. I have 3; one was made by Terada and the other 2 are from the Fernandez factory. Are they fake? No. They are authorized (not just licensed.) Their intrinsic value backs their validity, using your logic. I agree, though, that if you put a Fender decal on anything other than a real Fender, you should do something to indicate that it is a replica (tribute or whatever you want to call it) I'm in Philip McKnight's camp. He puts the word "fake" on the back of the headstock. I usually put a Squier logo on the back of the headstock or a disclaimer decal that says "built from Fender and non-Fender parts" and lacquer over it so it can't be easily removed.
the mid 80's made in Japan squire strats are better then the made in america fenders. ...
I remember reading that when the guys at fender first saw the products from the newly bought factory in Japan....they were blown away bc their domestic product sucked at the time and fender, as a company was ‘losing its way’. The newer classic vibe and vintage modifieds being made in Indonesia now are great guitars too. Maybe nowhere near those first Japanese models, but still I’d contend that theres little diff now between a higher end squire and mim fender, considering those higher end squires are $3-400 cheaper!
I asked my guitar teacher about the difference between MIM and a USA made guitar. The way he put it made a lot of sense. You can get a Made In Mexico for cheaper or you can get a US one that are often made by immigrant workers.
It's all about making more money and the US thinking they're better than everyone...
Luhnge : good explanation but , wrong..... mex and USA fenders have similar bodies and necks, but electronics and hardware are better on USA models. Mexican bodies, usually have 3-5 piece bodies, USA, 2-3 piece bodies. Both are good guitars, but it’s not just down to the origin of the worker, or their skill level 👍
USA fenders are better but it’s not worth the price difference when a Mexican model is serviceable with arguably minor differences
I recently bought a loaded strat body on ebay, the seller did not know for sure who made it (either squier or fender). It definitely had mim pickups, cts pots, a proper switch and a 2 point trem. The finish is metallic red. So everything I know to check makes me believe it is a mim strat body so I bought a mim strat neck and installed it. Would this be considered a fake fender?
It would be considered a "partscaster" since even though it may be built with genuine Fender parts it does not have a matching Fender serial number, and was not built by Fender.
It's a grey area, but to use the oft-repeated car analogy - if you built an entire car out of only spare parts you would end up with the "real deal", except that you could not register it because it would have no VIN (chassis number) or engine number of its own. It would look like the real thing but would lack official identity. You could argue that it inherited the VIN of the donor chassis but that assumes that the donor was broken for parts, which isn't always true, and it's still not actually the same car.
Ok, a Partocaster, but is it considered a fake fender or not? Also, at what point is the partscaster line crossed? If say my pickups fried and I bought new fender replacements would my guitar then be considered a partscaster? Most would answer no but if I were to replace the neck with a licensed replacement because the original is twisted or hopelessly bowed people would say yes, that's a partscaster but truly I can see no difference between replacing pickups and replacing a twisted neck. So again I ask, where is that pesky partocaster line?