It's a Mexican Standard. It was discontinued in 2018 and replaced by the Player, with a change in logo, the F neckplate, two screw tremolo and alnico pickups. If you got Pure Vintage pickups you got a good deal!
Dead on. It’s real. the vinyl special edition sticker on the back of the headstock is for the surf green metallic color. 59s are my favorite pickups. Excellent deal with the upgrades
Once I bought an "Yngwie Malmsteen" pre-wired pickguard. The box was legit and fully wrapped in plastic, and the picture on the instructions matched the pickguard. I spent $389 on the pickguard and thought I was super special. I loved the sound of the pickups and the great wiring job. Fast forward to when Sam Ash closed, and they were selling a MIM Player for a ridiculous $550. Normally it was $889, so I jumped on it. Plus, I happened to have a ton of parts for upgrades on hand. Anyway, I liked the Malmsteen pickguard and was going to toss the MIM pickguard and all the parts on it. So, I took it off to do so... The stock pickguard on the MIM was exactly the same as my $389 "Malmsteen" pickups, electronics, pots, everything. I'm talking the same part numbers, even the same handwriting on the pickups. What are the chances? It looked like literally the same guy did both pickguards. Even the SKU on the pickguard was the same. My $389 "Malmsteen" pre-wired pickguard upgrade was nothing but a standard stock pickguard they throw in a standard MIM Player... Wow, did I munch a sandwich of marketing bullshit on that one. But I had to admit, I loved the pickups and the way they sounded when I thought they were expensive. Totally caught myself being a price dick. In reality, I love the MIM standard pickups. Who'd have known? Funny thing, if you buy the next guitar up, the base "American Pro," I kid you not, it's actually got worse parts for twice the cash, haha. Marketing bullshit. Oh well... admitted.. I was fooled.
American Performer is the base usa level, not American Professional...but your point stands...the yosemite pickups and greasebucket tone control don't really do it for me, and I like the finishes for the player series better too...the coolest colors have a satin finish instead of gloss, which I can't recall anyone clamoring for
If it's worth anything, my 2004 Classic Series 50s has a blank neck plate. What strikes me as odd on yours is the combination of truss rod adjustment at the headstock, small headstock AND 21 frets. I'll be honest, that one's new to me as I've seen Strats with only two of those, not all three. I've always seen classic style Strats as 21 fret and more modern style ones with that 22nd fret. At least you were able to identify what yours is
There are some definite odd-balls out there. I think because this was early 2018, that was the year they went from Standard to Player. Maybe this was a way to use up old parts! LOL
In Feb I picked up an almost mint condition MIM Strat in metallic red for $440 including case.....humbucker bridge pickup and maple neck. I added a micro tilt which I do to most of my Strats and Teles.....patience pays off when shopping...
I bought a 2012 MIM Standard upgraded much like yours. However, I think maybe done before Fender sold the loaded pickguard as a kit. Mine was essentially upgraded with a Fat 50s pickguard aged and trem block, bone nut and vintage tuners. But seller gave me all the genuine fender parts cardboard packaging and invoices from shops that did all the work including the bone nut and setup. I bought the guitar for less than the loaded pickguard and bone nut invoices . It also happens to be my “thoughtless” first grab guitar, over any American or otherwise guitars. It rules.
I always call Fender because they have more info than you can look up online. I got a telly that was supposed to be a baritone and someone had replaced the neck with an affinity neck and they told me right away what color it was supposed to be what kind of make it was they knew everything about the Guitar and for me to find out, it was a fake.
I think that searching for "2018 Mexican special edition Strat" would be the way to nail down the model quick. As you said, there's no other indicator as to the model on the guitar itself and so people will naturally use that in listings and searches, whether they themselves are trying to identify one or simply trying to sell it for the best possible price. Also, as soon as I saw the brass trem block my first thought was that it had been modified/upgraded so that would set my spidey senses tingling and searching out other stuff like pickups etc. If someone's doing that to an MX Strat then probably they're going to throw in a set of U.S.A pickups too. Nice that it's seemingly got a Pure Vintage set as well. Another thing, I think that marking on the sticker under the scratchplate is a 7 with a cross-bar, rather than an F Congrats, reckon you got a good deal here
PLAYER SERIES SPECIAL RUN WITH UPGRADED BLOCK AND IT CAME WITH FENDER PLAYER SERIES ALNICO PICKUPS BUT YOURS ARE UPGRADED AS WELL AND SOME COME WITH A F STAMPED BACK PLATE SOME DO NOT. IF IT IS A RE ISSUE IT WILL NOT HAVE THE F IF IT IS PERIOD CORRECT. FENDER PING STYLE TUNERS. AWESOME FIND
My MIM strat is worthless. It's a 2000 model. I've modded it with Fender alnico pickups, PIO capacitors, bridge pickup on tone pot, Callaham trem block, stainless steel saddles, 5 trem springs, aluminum shielding and an aftermarket roasted maple neck with the original tuners. I wore the frets out on the stock neck. I'll never get the money back I spent on it, but I don't need another anyway.😊
@marcavus1 Oh yeah, I just wanted a quick fix. I only paid $250 for the Strat, some kid decided he would rather play bass 24 years ago, and put an ad in the paper. With all the mods, no one would buy it, but it's not for sale anyway.😃
Well I will throw my personal opinion in here, if the guitar feels and sounds good to you, then cool, no amount of badging is going to replace sound, and feel. If you want an example from the late 70 and 80s , Eddie Van Halen, it was not a fender neck not a fender body, the electrical parts might have had a fender part here or there but, in all honesty and in his own words it was not a fender, it truly was a strat like parts caster, and yes we are talking about Frankenstein or some know it as the frankenstrat. He put something together that in his words was probably a mistake but turned out to be what he wanted, so no logos mean little to a player but sound and feel are king. A personal short example, I put a 94$ guitar pick ups in my 120 dollar strat like axe, just because I liked how the cheaper pickups sounded after all the upgrades and modding I have a sweet sounding axe for much less than a USA fender and a lot of Mexican fenders. Name matters not, feel and sound again are king.
Hey Jayce, loved this video and really enjoyed the previous one. As a novice player who once had the exact same feeling as you had with your Martin (mine was a £1500 Guild) I can very much relate :) Anyway, fast forward a few years and I am thinking of picking up a Fender - maybe MIM - and noticed a few videos talking about the noise a single coil makes when on 'standby' so to speak. Is that something you've wrestled with?
Single coils can be noisy, especially if you have dirty electricity (yes, it's a thing!). Shield the pickup cavity, make sure your amp is connected to a properly grounded receptacle and also get a noise suppression pedal.
I got my MIJ for a good deal on reverb, it's a Final Fantasy 14 guitar. I'd be worried it was a fake if it wasn't way too unique 😆. I don't think anyone would take the time to fake one of those with the resin and the inlay.
This is why, if you are buying a guitar to play, you should always be more concerned about how it plays and not what the logo on the end says nor whether anyone listening to you cares about that logo either, because unless they too are a guitar player, they almost certainly won't care about that. In the entire history of guitar making, there is no recorded case ever, of the logo and serial number on the end of a guitar affecting how it plays or what it sounds like and it's not at all uncommon for used guitars to have been modded. I don't think there is a single guitar in my entire collection which hasn't had something done to it, be it tuners, pick ups, nuts, bridges or whatever. Now of course it is nice to have things which are 'genuine', and if you buy something sold as genuine which turns out to not what it was sold as, then that's something you can take up with the seller, who may or may not themselves have been similarly duped or unaware of some later mods it may have had. But even after all that can be brought to a satisfactory conclusion, if it plays okay and you like it, really it's not a problem. I never worry about what such things will do for 'resale value' either, because there are better things to invest in if that's a concern. The best-sounding and best-playing acoustic guitar I have, is a cheap ass Silvertone Dark Star; it blows my other more expensive acoustic guitars out of the water and I knew that when I tried it in the shop, so I did not care what logo was on the end of it, I cared that it sounded and played great and would be even better when I did a bit of tweaking and some decent hardware on it. The same is true of a lot of electric guitars I have.
That Fender logo looks like a '70's reissue. An unmarked neck plate is not good, brass tremolo block is not a standard feature either. If you take the neck off, there might be some markings or indications.
Lots of initials written on the neck. The date of manufacture stamped with stamp that has date in Spanish. Seems legit. I'm guessing the trem block was a mod.
The pre player series had a CBS style logo, and blank neck plates. The fender site has a serial number lookup that will give you all the details, right down to the colour. Looks legit to me.
Interesting journey! It seems with all the readily available upgrades for Fender's, it would be pretty hard to get the provenance for any of them. If it feels good and sounds good and is in the right price range for you? What the hey? 👍
In the video you say this isn't a partscaster. It is. Just because the body and neck came from the same guitar, doesn't mean this isn't a partscaster. It definitely is. But being this is an mx strat, it doesn't hurt the value. But if this was a mij or American, it would.
Hi Jayce, I don't currently play guitar. My question is, can a buyer check the serial number at a store or even if buying privately before completing the transaction?
Fender (and pretty sure Gibson and Yamaha) all have serial number look up databases. Just Google Fender Serial Lookup or whatever brand you want. Then you enter the number and you will usually get a result that tells you the model and year.
Like the time I bought this 90s Squier Telecaster for $150 on Reverb and it showed up with DiMarzio Twang King pickups in it.. Buddy, you got hooked up! \,,/,(>
Personally, I wouldn't buy a second hand Fender or Gibson, too many fakes around. I'd rather buy the fake from new and know I have a fake. You can always upgrade to genuine hardware if you like.
They change them up every 10-15 years. The MIM standards in the late 90s/ early 2000s had a grey logo. The strat in the video's logo is from the 2010s and teens and for the last few years they've had to gold spaghetti logos. The new ones just look like US standards, an odd choice on Fender's part if they want anyone to shell out another 800 for the the US made version
i looked up 2 sqiers this week on that fender page got no result. got results on both few years before they changed the page.Mn1997 squier and a gold 2001 affiniy
Because this isn't a review it's discussing whether the guitar was fake or not, here is a link to this guitar being played. th-cam.com/video/siv_3ykqUbk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=JzAHrG50CSkyqaxt&t=139
I've played a genuine Fender. A made in USA strat, from around 1995. It was okay. I think the MIM Strat I had (plus top) was just as good and I think the Firefly strat I currently own the Hils Strat I just reviewed are every bit as good.
@@JayceAllanGuitar I have a 95 usa strat and I'm buying another 2005 usa the first I got and I felt like the first time playing a real guitar nothing comes closer to the playability and sound
What a nerd... why would anyone try to fake a $600 mexican strat? I'd be more worried about a 3 or 4K "Custom Shop" that didn't have a COA maybe... but come on... what a nervous nellie.
It's a Mexican Standard. It was discontinued in 2018 and replaced by the Player, with a change in logo, the F neckplate, two screw tremolo and alnico pickups. If you got Pure Vintage pickups you got a good deal!
I think so. This one was built in January of 2018. So it was some of the last to be made before the switch. That was April I think.
@@JayceAllanGuitar Steven is 100% correct.
Dead on. It’s real. the vinyl special edition sticker on the back of the headstock is for the surf green metallic color. 59s are my favorite pickups. Excellent deal with the upgrades
@@jonathanwilhelm4097 Okay, I wondered what made it "Special" LOL
Those tuners are better and I prefer those pickups. Basically you got an upgraded Standard model.
The pickups are great.
Once I bought an "Yngwie Malmsteen" pre-wired pickguard. The box was legit and fully wrapped in plastic, and the picture on the instructions matched the pickguard. I spent $389 on the pickguard and thought I was super special. I loved the sound of the pickups and the great wiring job.
Fast forward to when Sam Ash closed, and they were selling a MIM Player for a ridiculous $550. Normally it was $889, so I jumped on it. Plus, I happened to have a ton of parts for upgrades on hand. Anyway, I liked the Malmsteen pickguard and was going to toss the MIM pickguard and all the parts on it. So, I took it off to do so...
The stock pickguard on the MIM was exactly the same as my $389 "Malmsteen" pickups, electronics, pots, everything. I'm talking the same part numbers, even the same handwriting on the pickups. What are the chances? It looked like literally the same guy did both pickguards. Even the SKU on the pickguard was the same. My $389 "Malmsteen" pre-wired pickguard upgrade was nothing but a standard stock pickguard they throw in a standard MIM Player...
Wow, did I munch a sandwich of marketing bullshit on that one. But I had to admit, I loved the pickups and the way they sounded when I thought they were expensive. Totally caught myself being a price dick. In reality, I love the MIM standard pickups. Who'd have known?
Funny thing, if you buy the next guitar up, the base "American Pro," I kid you not, it's actually got worse parts for twice the cash, haha. Marketing bullshit. Oh well... admitted.. I was fooled.
American Performer is the base usa level, not American Professional...but your point stands...the yosemite pickups and greasebucket tone control don't really do it for me, and I like the finishes for the player series better too...the coolest colors have a satin finish instead of gloss, which I can't recall anyone clamoring for
@@jasondorsey7110 Thanks for correcting me.
@@petersouthwell5971 They got me too, spent a thousand bucks for a bass I'm now saving to replace the electronics in
I bet lots of parts from the MIM are the same as the American. They make guitars of all price ranges because they know people will pay for them.
@@JayceAllanGuitar To the ignorant, price is a reassuring feature. That's how it works.
If it's worth anything, my 2004 Classic Series 50s has a blank neck plate.
What strikes me as odd on yours is the combination of truss rod adjustment at the headstock, small headstock AND 21 frets. I'll be honest, that one's new to me as I've seen Strats with only two of those, not all three. I've always seen classic style Strats as 21 fret and more modern style ones with that 22nd fret.
At least you were able to identify what yours is
There are some definite odd-balls out there. I think because this was early 2018, that was the year they went from Standard to Player. Maybe this was a way to use up old parts! LOL
In Feb I picked up an almost mint condition MIM Strat in metallic red for $440 including case.....humbucker bridge pickup and maple neck. I added a micro tilt which I do to most of my Strats and Teles.....patience pays off when shopping...
Great bargain!
You got a Hot Rod , why complain , all the hard work has been done ... Enjoy it ...
Who's complaining?
I bought a 2012 MIM Standard upgraded much like yours. However, I think maybe done before Fender sold the loaded pickguard as a kit. Mine was essentially upgraded with a Fat 50s pickguard aged and trem block, bone nut and vintage tuners. But seller gave me all the genuine fender parts cardboard packaging and invoices from shops that did all the work including the bone nut and setup. I bought the guitar for less than the loaded pickguard and bone nut invoices . It also happens to be my “thoughtless” first grab guitar, over any American or otherwise guitars. It rules.
I got a 2009 MIM with the same loaded pickguard. I think the 59 pickups sound great.
if it looks sounds and plays as you expect then i wouldnt question it..If theyre fender parts.
I had a 1993 Mexican that i learned on. I had to pawn it for $125 in 96 to pay bills. Man i miss that one, it was really nice
I always call Fender because they have more info than you can look up online. I got a telly that was supposed to be a baritone and someone had replaced the neck with an affinity neck and they told me right away what color it was supposed to be what kind of make it was they knew everything about the Guitar and for me to find out, it was a fake.
I thought about calling. I will eventually. I'd like to know the details on the guitar.
I think that searching for "2018 Mexican special edition Strat" would be the way to nail down the model quick. As you said, there's no other indicator as to the model on the guitar itself and so people will naturally use that in listings and searches, whether they themselves are trying to identify one or simply trying to sell it for the best possible price.
Also, as soon as I saw the brass trem block my first thought was that it had been modified/upgraded so that would set my spidey senses tingling and searching out other stuff like pickups etc. If someone's doing that to an MX Strat then probably they're going to throw in a set of U.S.A pickups too. Nice that it's seemingly got a Pure Vintage set as well.
Another thing, I think that marking on the sticker under the scratchplate is a 7 with a cross-bar, rather than an F
Congrats, reckon you got a good deal here
I wonder what the 7 with cross bar means? Maybe a Google image search is in order.
@@JayceAllanGuitar I'd say probably an employee sign off or maybe a paint code would be most likely but that's just guessing
Is it ‘new’ or ‘used’? If it’s used you expect someone may upgrade the trem block for sustain. Pretty nice guitar.
Used. Someone upgraded the trem block, put a new loaded pick guard in and changed the tuning buttons.
The black letter Fender logo was the easiest clue to spot immediately telling you it's an MIM Strat.
PLAYER SERIES SPECIAL RUN WITH UPGRADED BLOCK AND IT CAME WITH FENDER PLAYER SERIES ALNICO PICKUPS BUT YOURS ARE UPGRADED AS WELL AND SOME COME WITH A F STAMPED BACK PLATE SOME DO NOT. IF IT IS A RE ISSUE IT WILL NOT HAVE THE F IF IT IS PERIOD CORRECT. FENDER PING STYLE TUNERS. AWESOME FIND
Thank you.
My MIM strat is worthless. It's a 2000 model. I've modded it with Fender alnico pickups, PIO capacitors, bridge pickup on tone pot, Callaham trem block, stainless steel saddles, 5 trem springs, aluminum shielding and an aftermarket roasted maple neck with the original tuners. I wore the frets out on the stock neck. I'll never get the money back I spent on it, but I don't need another anyway.😊
Sounds to me it's worth something to YOU! ;-)
Get another neck or a refret.
@marcavus1 Oh yeah, I just wanted a quick fix. I only paid $250 for the Strat, some kid decided he would rather play bass 24 years ago, and put an ad in the paper. With all the mods, no one would buy it, but it's not for sale anyway.😃
Well I will throw my personal opinion in here, if the guitar feels and sounds good to you, then cool, no amount of badging is going to replace sound, and feel.
If you want an example from the late 70 and 80s , Eddie Van Halen, it was not a fender neck not a fender body, the electrical parts might have had a fender part here or there but, in all honesty and in his own words it was not a fender, it truly was a strat like parts caster, and yes we are talking about Frankenstein or some know it as the frankenstrat.
He put something together that in his words was probably a mistake but turned out to be what he wanted, so no logos mean little to a player but sound and feel are king.
A personal short example, I put a 94$ guitar pick ups in my 120 dollar strat like axe, just because I liked how the cheaper pickups sounded after all the upgrades and modding I have a sweet sounding axe for much less than a USA fender and a lot of Mexican fenders.
Name matters not, feel and sound again are king.
Well said.
You would have thought by now Fender would have incorporated some sort of tech on the model to authenticate the guitars!
Right, like RFID or something, or at the very least a brand in the neck pocket like Warmouth and XGP.
Hey Jayce, loved this video and really enjoyed the previous one. As a novice player who once had the exact same feeling as you had with your Martin (mine was a £1500 Guild) I can very much relate :) Anyway, fast forward a few years and I am thinking of picking up a Fender - maybe MIM - and noticed a few videos talking about the noise a single coil makes when on 'standby' so to speak. Is that something you've wrestled with?
Single coils can be noisy, especially if you have dirty electricity (yes, it's a thing!). Shield the pickup cavity, make sure your amp is connected to a properly grounded receptacle and also get a noise suppression pedal.
I got my MIJ for a good deal on reverb, it's a Final Fantasy 14 guitar. I'd be worried it was a fake if it wasn't way too unique 😆. I don't think anyone would take the time to fake one of those with the resin and the inlay.
Interesting.
You got a deal, actually. That is real in a nice seafoam green, and upgraded hardware.
I think it's a keeper...for a while anyway! 🤪
This is why, if you are buying a guitar to play, you should always be more concerned about how it plays and not what the logo on the end says nor whether anyone listening to you cares about that logo either, because unless they too are a guitar player, they almost certainly won't care about that. In the entire history of guitar making, there is no recorded case ever, of the logo and serial number on the end of a guitar affecting how it plays or what it sounds like and it's not at all uncommon for used guitars to have been modded. I don't think there is a single guitar in my entire collection which hasn't had something done to it, be it tuners, pick ups, nuts, bridges or whatever.
Now of course it is nice to have things which are 'genuine', and if you buy something sold as genuine which turns out to not what it was sold as, then that's something you can take up with the seller, who may or may not themselves have been similarly duped or unaware of some later mods it may have had. But even after all that can be brought to a satisfactory conclusion, if it plays okay and you like it, really it's not a problem. I never worry about what such things will do for 'resale value' either, because there are better things to invest in if that's a concern.
The best-sounding and best-playing acoustic guitar I have, is a cheap ass Silvertone Dark Star; it blows my other more expensive acoustic guitars out of the water and I knew that when I tried it in the shop, so I did not care what logo was on the end of it, I cared that it sounded and played great and would be even better when I did a bit of tweaking and some decent hardware on it. The same is true of a lot of electric guitars I have.
That Fender logo looks like a '70's reissue. An unmarked neck plate is not good, brass tremolo block is not a standard feature either. If you take the neck off, there might be some markings or indications.
Lots of initials written on the neck. The date of manufacture stamped with stamp that has date in Spanish. Seems legit. I'm guessing the trem block was a mod.
@@JayceAllanGuitar Definitely a mod in the right direction.😁 It's a beautiful Strat.
The pre player series had a CBS style logo, and blank neck plates. The fender site has a serial number lookup that will give you all the details, right down to the colour. Looks legit to me.
Tried that, the serial wasn't found.
Awaiting Fender's upcoming Jayce Allen Model.
@@azmike3572 😂🎸
Interesting video Jayce! Nicely done. Looks like you actually got a "better deal" than initially thought.
Not as nice as a plus top though! 😉
@@JayceAllanGuitar They're all nice!! 🙂
@@AJgeartalk Yes they are!
It is a FSR Surf Pearl.
Interesting journey! It seems with all the readily available upgrades for Fender's, it would be pretty hard to get the provenance for any of them. If it feels good and sounds good and is in the right price range for you? What the hey? 👍
🤫Do you like it dose it play well sound good , feel comfortable . If you can answer yes to all…worries over now get on and enjoy !!
In the video you say this isn't a partscaster. It is. Just because the body and neck came from the same guitar, doesn't mean this isn't a partscaster. It definitely is. But being this is an mx strat, it doesn't hurt the value. But if this was a mij or American, it would.
Fair enough.
Hi Jayce, I don't currently play guitar. My question is, can a buyer check the serial number at a store or even if buying privately before completing the transaction?
Fender (and pretty sure Gibson and Yamaha) all have serial number look up databases. Just Google Fender Serial Lookup or whatever brand you want. Then you enter the number and you will usually get a result that tells you the model and year.
That's a negative sir what you have Is a Chender body with loaded stuff from fender to sweaten the pot iv got the exact same thing
it's most certainly all UPGRADES from the stock stuff, you're lucky
Like the time I bought this 90s Squier Telecaster for $150 on Reverb and it showed up with DiMarzio Twang King pickups in it.. Buddy, you got hooked up! \,,/,(>
Every once in a while I get a good deal.
Personally, I wouldn't buy a second hand Fender or Gibson, too many fakes around. I'd rather buy the fake from new and know I have a fake. You can always upgrade to genuine hardware if you like.
If strings are lines drawn on a piece of cardboard, this is a fake guitar.
But if the lines are drawn in Sharpie...it's for realz!
I thought Mexican Fenders had the old type headatock spaghetti lettering in gold, not the heavy black like this one.
This logo was on the MIM Standards until 2018. Not sure when they started though.
They change them up every 10-15 years. The MIM standards in the late 90s/ early 2000s had a grey logo. The strat in the video's logo is from the 2010s and teens and for the last few years they've had to gold spaghetti logos. The new ones just look like US standards, an odd choice on Fender's part if they want anyone to shell out another 800 for the the US made version
I still go for the sound of that american strat, its way different than mexico strat
lol
😅😂🤣
Well obviously VenturaVlogger...the Mexican strat speaks Spanish!
It came from an alternate universe.
That makes sense because sometimes I feel like I'm from one too!
i looked up 2 sqiers this week on that fender page got no result. got results on both few years before they changed the page.Mn1997 squier and a gold 2001 affiniy
There used to be a lookup site based in the Netherlands that showed data for all guitar brands and one day it just shut down.
M04 barcode on body= 2004? Also, could be 7 not an F sticker in CNC hole. Very nice guitar.
Not sure. Could be.
It a Fender , dont worry about it 😊
The last person who had it did not get their money out of it , what makes you think youll get more.😮
Who’s worried?
@@JayceAllanGuitar I think you got extras on that Strat ,looks like a good guitar.
Score! What a nice guitar.
my local shop sells Chibson for 600, they label them as Replicas. It honestly makes my skin crawl and makes me not want to do business with them.
Yikes.
All Stratocasters are partscasters, whether you pick the parts or pay Fender to do it for you.
I wouldn't worry about it being a "fake" if there's no US serial on it.
I'd say any Fender made after 1965 is fake.
Why does he not give sound shamples
Because this isn't a review it's discussing whether the guitar was fake or not, here is a link to this guitar being played. th-cam.com/video/siv_3ykqUbk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=JzAHrG50CSkyqaxt&t=139
Anyone saying if it’s plays well who cares you never played a genuine fender
I've played a genuine Fender. A made in USA strat, from around 1995. It was okay. I think the MIM Strat I had (plus top) was just as good and I think the Firefly strat I currently own the Hils Strat I just reviewed are every bit as good.
@@JayceAllanGuitar I have a 95 usa strat and I'm buying another 2005 usa the first I got and I felt like the first time playing a real guitar nothing comes closer to the playability and sound
That’s great. I mean Fender certainly knows how to build a quality guitar.
Nice Guitar!
Thank you!
There's nothing wrong with you're mexican standard
You're just trying to save face that you paid the same price for one you could've gotten new, and got ripped off lol.
Wow, yeah, you got me figured out. Can't pull anything over on you.
Yes, probably got too much time on your hands.
I wish.
Fender have guitars made in China, and you think you have An american guitar
What a nerd... why would anyone try to fake a $600 mexican strat? I'd be more worried about a 3 or 4K "Custom Shop" that didn't have a COA maybe... but come on... what a nervous nellie.
I've been call a nerd from way better people than you. Take a number chief.
Who would bobber to fake a Mexican You're tutorial is extremely boring
Probably because it isn’t a tutorial.
To long, got boring, switched off.