Thursday, April 19, 2012

FENDER MIM STANDARD STRATOCASTER

Hello everyone, I finally acquired a Fender Standard Stratocaster made in Mexico. I originally hesitated on buying a MIM Stratocaster because of the polyester finish, but this guitar really blows me away. First of all, being a Fender, it shows an excellent craftsmanship and high quality on every details. So for you who think that MIM Stratocaster is not worth your money, please re-consider MIM Stratocaster, this guitar surely worth every cents I spent.

Basic Spec

The guitar was made in early mid 2011. Color is black, with maple neck no fingerboard 21 frets. It uses the vintage 6 screws tremolo and it's pretty smooth and easy to use the vibrato arm(I'm a heavy whammy user). It comes with ceramic single coil pickups on a semi aged plastic pickguard and pickup cover. Tuners are already staggered, it comes with a single string tree.

The Feel
Maple neck isn't glossy, it has urethane finish and it's doing good to my hand. Not as fantastic as my MIA neck or Prestige PGM neck though, but definitely better than my JEM-JR Korean Wizard neck. The tremolo can't be used wildly, it goes out of tune very fast. I'm in a process of getting a set of locking tuners to improve tuning stability. The fret is somehow smaller than my MIA(not quite sure but it feels small) and it's a bit harder to play on compared to my MIA neck. The polyester body finish is very sleek. I'm strongly against polyester finish but luckily on this guitar, the paint is applied thinly to the body(I checked the trem springs cover screw hole).

Weight is very normal for a regular Stratocaster, it won't weight you down too much. I set the trem to float, and the action is already low from the factory so I didn't adjust anything, it feels perfectly right to my hand. The neck is thick and rounded as in regular C-shaped Stratocaster neck, and the frets are slightly rounded too for a more comfortable chord playing.

The Sound
The sound is very Fender-ish; clicky, percussive, bell tone on 2nd and 4th position, very bright and clean, sits well on an average mix. It lacks only one thing: sustain; this is what I feared the most from Stratocaster-type guitars. I immediately put DiMarzio Area 58, 67 and 61, rewired the tone knob for the bridge, and now I got a proper sounding Stratocaster with no hum and long sustain.

MIA(Made in America) vs MIM
This topic has been discussed since the existence of MIM Strat. MIM is really worth every cent you spend, it's not expensive and it sounds good too. If you plan to use the guitar frequently, MIM is really worth the money, it has all the "mojo" of Fender guitars. Now you probably ask: then why should I buy MIA Standard Strat? Because it's also worth every cent you spend. The craftsmanship of an MIA is way better than the MIM; let's say if MIM is extremely good, then MIA is perfectly perfect. When you first touch an MIA, you'll immediately feel that "wow" factor even before you know it's an MIA. The neck, the body contour, the finish and all the details are very perfect on MIA.

BUT, if your priority is tone, it's not possible to get a good sound out of MIM Standard Stratocaster. That will depend on how much are you willing to upgrade the pickups on the guitar to make it sound fantastic. MIA by itself already sounds great but if you dare to replace the pickups with a set of better sounding pickups, then you'll get a fantastic tone.

Let's say you'll use a same set of pickups for both MIA and MIM and you do a blindfold tone test, you'll notice only a tiny sound difference. Although MIA surely sounds better than MIM, it's not significant at all.

Overall
10 out of 10. Once again, Fender made a believer out of me. Good quality guitar, good price, great sound. I'm very happy with this guitar and I'll make some good music with it for sure.

I hope you enjoy this post. Cheers and God Bless :)

p.s. I'll soon post a review of my DiMarzio Area Pickup set, stay tune!

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