Thread with 93 posts

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the white balance in that pic is wrong, the yellowing on the plastic has been interpreted by my phone's camera as the room having warmer lighting that it has; to my eyes it's an almost fluorescent cream colour

anyway wow haha i'm glad she's intact but she will need some Work

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passive electronics (hexaphonic pickup of some type -> volume pot -> single output) still work! and hey look i finally have a guitar that my VOX AmPlug3 AC30 isn't a massive pain in the arse to use with (tele-style side output jacks are not friends with it)

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this image probably qualifies as guitar gore but uh, look, i've never done it before, the tuning machines on this have seen much better days, i didn't have a string winder, and i had to improvise something to physically be able to wind it. i'll fix these next time lmao

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she's now as close to in tune as i care to put her (the hollow neck and the sorry state of the tuners give poor tuning stability so it feels a bit sisyphean to go for perfect), so here's what the Squier Stratocaster Guitar and Controller pickup sounds like ^^

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the Squier Stratocaster Guitar and Controller makes an admirable attempt at being both a guitar and a midi controller. i think the saddest thing about it as a guitar is just the plastic fretboard. having a part of the guitar you directly touch be made of plastic is really sad

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it turns out my strings (fender nickel-plated steel 9 to 42's as the owner's manual demands, though they're classic smooth-core rather than modern hex-core type) easily scratch off whatever corrosion has accumulated on these frets, and frets are meant to tolerate bending :)

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80 minutes of finger callus speedrunning later, here's what the fret segments for the first string look like now. you can see how there's now a slither of the underlying shiny metal that's been re-exposed on all of these

but i begin to suspect i do not value my time and energy…

…so i am going to just order some kind of very fine-grained abrasive pad, yet another set of strings, a set of new tuners, and a string winder, and resume next weekend

but now i can play the first string with the midi system, so that's cool!

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hmm the problem with replacing the tuners is that i don't want to buy the cheapest possible ones (i'll surely regret it?), i don't want to spend close to or more than $100 (too much for a guitar that cost $350 in 2010), and i don't want to buy whatever fender originally put on it

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at the same time, i don't want to change the appearance of the guitar too much, and also more than anything else i have no idea how to judge the quality of these things, but i don't want to have to lean on someone else for advice yet again… so many “buts”

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an unfortunate thing about owning an old, cheap squier from 2010 is that the tuners are not in one of the standard shapes you'll find sold on, say, thomann. they're these weird things: hexagonal, closed, with staggered screws

i've found a few forum posts online mentioning them…

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in case anyone else should find this thread in future, here are other places i've seen them mentioned:

https://www.tdpri.com/threads/are-there-any-replacement-tuners-for-these-90s-squier.1074079/
https://menga.net/squier-tuner-replacements
https://www.instructables.com/Rehab-and-Upgrades-for-a-Fender-Squire-Strat-Plus-/ (no text mention, but one of the “more images” under “step 1. dismantling” has the same tuners)

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a few sellers seemingly have a replacement with a slightly different button; https://guitaraudio.com/genuine-fender-squier-old-style-99-06-affinity-strat-chrome-tuners-keys-set claims fender part number of 005-5404-049 which i can't find elsewhere, and others claim a part number of 005-5404-000, e.g.
https://www.guitarpartsfactory.us/005-5404-000-Fender-Squier-Tuners-99-Affinity-Strat-Chrome-Diamond-Style-Set-6-0055404000 and https://darrenriley.com/homepage/fender-squier-affinity-tuners-0055404000/

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a funny thing about economies of scale is that it's seemingly much easier and cheaper to just buy a new set of saddles for this bridge rather than to get one (1) screw to replace the one that fell out

well, mr thomann, you make a compelling offer (€12), i guess i'll take it

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one concern i had was that perhaps this guitar's bridge is unusual in that it has to be grounded for it to function (assumption: fret sensing works by testing if a fret segment is currently grounded by the strings+bridge) but apparently grounding the bridge is normal? cool

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the HOSCO fret polishing rubber is magic, it is making it easy to remove the corrosion (example quick before-and-after with a little rubbing; there's now a clean strip of metal, not just a hint of one), i just gotta uh, remove all the strings again to make this easier lmao

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after another three hours of scrubbing, well, these frets are still a long way from ideal, but this must be the best they've looked in a very long time!

i am really very impressed by just how resilient, versatile and gentle this fret polishing rubber is, incredible tool

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removed the one of the tuners from the Squier in the hopes of lubricating it. this finally lets me see who made it (JIN HO) and what the hole diameter is (~8mm but i really am not confident measuring wooden hole diameters with this caliper, big error bar); shaft is 6.0mm

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all the tuners are back on the headstock now!

they're all easy to turn now… but some of them are too easy, and tragically i know why that is, and it is due to one of my several unforced errors from being impatient last week. kids don't copy me i do not always act wisely

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possibly interesting detail of this guitar's bridge: whoever designed it was clearly concerned that the low and high E strings' saddles might slip out of alignment if the screws aren't level, so there's actually little indents in the plate for the screws to sit in for those two

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i would not say the Squier Stratocaster Guitar and Controller is a good guitar if you don't enjoy the process of adjusting tuning, relief, action and intonation, because unusually poor rigidity of the neck means you'll be doing a lot of those. but it's kind of relaxing

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it took four hours(!) but the action is now in the pleasant 1.5~2mm range, the neck relief is good, the strings are in tune, the saddles do not wobble and intonation is acceptable. she's now quite enjoyable to play, acoustically at least!

just need to tweak pickup height now?

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even with more normal string action and pickup height, one of the middle strings (was it D or G? i forget) was still registering far too weakly on the MIDI output, so it was time to finally adjust the fabled undocumented sensitivity pots hidden cunningly next to the batteries

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honestly can't believe how well the Squier is working now, i didn't notice a single fret tracking issue in the game which is so hard to believe considering the dire state this guitar was in when i got it. i'm really happy. going to have a lot of fun with my funny cyborg guitar

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