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Frankenstrat
Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2007 2:56 pm
by Paul Wolfe
I hadn't seen
this on the board, it's somewhat interesting....
Posted: Sat Mar 24, 2007 2:43 pm
by The Flying Dutchman
Amazing job on that guitar! It looks exactly the same!
Thanks for that!
Posted: Sat Mar 24, 2007 5:23 pm
by Paul Wolfe
It's quite interesting that during the filmed interview they say he did it all from photographs, and in the magazine he says he took the original apart to make a template and Ed loaned it to him every time he asked for it to compare details...
It is an amazing replica of a beat-to-hell axe.
Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 1:28 pm
by The Flying Dutchman
RockyRhoads wrote:It's quite interesting that during the filmed interview they say he did it all from photographs, and in the magazine he says he took the original apart to make a template and Ed loaned it to him every time he asked for it to compare details...
To me it seems impossible to duplicate a guitar just by using pictures...... you need the EXACT measurements then. And when I hear Eddy telliing he couldn't get them apart then a true miracle has happened if it was done by only using pics!
Anyway, that guitar looks great indeed!
Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 3:51 pm
by Tommy
The price tag is pretty big as well...

Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 4:18 pm
by The Flying Dutchman
Tommy wrote:The price tag is pretty big as well...

Yeah, but alcohol isn't cheap these days......

Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 4:28 pm
by Tommy
True!
EVH said they buried Dimabag with his original black/yellow frankenstrat? That's new to me? Way cool!
Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 5:23 pm
by Paul Wolfe
Tommy wrote:The price tag is pretty big as well...

A guitar should be an instrument for making music, NOT an investment.
Ed's original guitar cost him $50 for the body and $80 for the neck, the rest of the parts cost him less tha $70, bringing him to a total under $200. The copies are going for $30,000 - not a bad profit, huh? Let's see, 300 guitars at
$30,000 comes to $9,000,000.
Posted: Mon Mar 26, 2007 4:02 pm
by Stiltzkin
i could build Frankenstrats and charge way less than that
and still earn alot
anyone interested ?

Posted: Mon Mar 26, 2007 9:47 pm
by Tommy
Stiltzkin wrote:i could build Frankenstrats and charge way less than that
and still earn alot
anyone interested ?

Err... I'll build my own, rather than having you do it!
If you do the finishing yourself, you'd get away with $800-1000 depending on the woods etc. And then you'd have a really good guitar, with all the best hardware!

Of course, if you buy the body off of ebay, you'd get away even cheaper!
Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 3:51 am
by Stiltzkin
$800-1000 is way over the actual price
body + neck = $250 approx
color = $65
pickup = $160
floyd = $70
tuners = $22
then add another $50 for pot and knob.
... total = $617 ...
now this is if you get the body and neck new
from various luthiers

but you could probably
go even cheaper ...
you could probably do cheaper with the humbucker
and go wit a regular Duncan SH-1 instead of
the '78 EVH one from the custom shop

Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 2:09 pm
by Paul Wolfe
Depending on the wood? If you go with anything other than an alder body, it wouldn't be the same thing - if you're trying to duplicate Ed's guitar. Alder is what is used to make guitars with paint, because it doesn't have much in the way of grain.
As for the pickup, any humbucking pickup will do. Ed pulled his out of a 335 and rewound it himself. So get any humbucker at all and rewind it until it sounds good and there you go.
As for the paint, the article says "multiple coats of laquer"... Ed used Krylon spray paint out of a can. You should be able to get all three colors for $20. And a roll of masking tape for about $3.
With eBay, you could duplicate that guitar pretty closely for under $400 if you check out the "project guitar" auctions...
Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 1:37 pm
by Tommy
Ah, yeah, of course. I was thinking maybe birdseye maple neck or something fancy, while your at it.

I'd rather get a cheaper pickup, SD Custom 5 perhaps, and use the cash saved there on either a Schaller floyd, or an OFR. Of course, the costs of the neck and body varies from place to place.

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:18 pm
by Stiltzkin
RockyRhoads wrote:Depending on the wood? If you go with anything other than an alder body, it wouldn't be the same thing - if you're trying to duplicate Ed's guitar. Alder is what is used to make guitars with paint, because it doesn't have much in the way of grain.
As for the pickup, any humbucking pickup will do. Ed pulled his out of a 335 and rewound it himself. So get any humbucker at all and rewind it until it sounds good and there you go.
As for the paint, the article says "multiple coats of laquer"... Ed used Krylon spray paint out of a can. You should be able to get all three colors for $20. And a roll of masking tape for about $3.
With eBay, you could duplicate that guitar pretty closely for under $400 if you check out the "project guitar" auctions...
Ed's Frankenstrat is ash
also, the Duncan '78 is modeled after Ed's actual pickup

although you could go with a Gibson '57 classic pickup,
rewind it and put in a DiMarzio magnet like Ed did.
Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:40 pm
by Paul Wolfe
Stiltzkin wrote:
Ed's Frankenstrat is ash
Are you certain? With all that paint, it'd be hard to tell for sure... I'll take your word for it though.
Here is a great description of the different kinds of wood used in guitar bodies. Warmoth is Linn Ellsworth's company - used to be Boogie Bodies where Ed picked up his original parts. Now it's up here in Puyallup, WA, it's a fun place to visit, out in the middle of nowhere.