New Guitar Lineup

Maybe some of you remember my old pic of all my gear together. Well a lot has changed since then. The economy has kept me on a tight budget. But I managed to make due with what I had accumulated over the years, and made a couple of cheap purchases on some pawn shop specials that turned out to be real gems.
I did buy a Squier and Hamer that totaled $140 for both of them, and gave some of my others some real interesting changes. It took a few months, but now I have a nice complete collection that I can use for live gigs and recording. All wiring and intonation set-ups have been made, and I'd have to say it was well worth the time and effort.
So here's some pics of my new line-up of guitars for now. I don't really have the money to fix the rest right now, so this will be it for a while.
On the left is my Squier HM-3. It has a Dimarzio Steve's special in the bridge, the other pickups are basically dummies. The guitar has a coil tap and kill switch installed. It's an extremely light-weight, thin guitar. Nice for those 3-set nights when the weight can get to you with heavier, non-contoured bodies. The midrange is very controllable on this guitar. It's Ryan's favorite to use these days.
On the Right is my newest addition. It's the guitar you see the guts in above. I found this 1994 Hamer in a pawn shop for $90 and it's every bit as good as any $800 Strat. I wanted to take this one to the next level. I installed 2-Seymour Duncan JB jr and a Duckbucker middle. The wiring is Super-Strat wiring utilizing 3-toggle switches instead of a standard 3-way or 5-way switch. It creates 13 different sounds with this wiring design. With the Duncan pickups and some fine tuning setups, the guitar sounds as well as any guitar I can imagine now. Great for the studio!!
The guitar on the left of this pic has been my main live guitar for a while now. It's a Squier Stagemaster neck-through with 2 Seymour Duncan PA-TB1 installed. Standard 3-way switching. The PA-TB1s are the best sounding humbuckers I've run across so far. Very clean sounding in the clean channel, and with the sustain of the neck-through design, it screams like no other when distorted.
The guitar on the right is my other newest addition. It's a Squier Affinity body (bought the whole guitar for $50 and parted it out) with a Westone neck much like the HM-3 neck. I wired it up with an EVH pickguard. It has a Dimarzio Air Norton pickup wired straight to a volume knob. This thing is balls to the wall with a fast low action neck. Very Van Halen-esque to play.
The guitar on the left is my other Stagemaster. I went a different direction with this one and experimented a little. It has a Dimarzio HS-3 in the bridge, and a Super Distortion in the neck. The top vol. knob and 3-way switch have been dummied. It's wired with one vol., one tone knob, and a toggle switch to play either the Bridge or both. You get the best of both worlds here. The marriage of an HS-3 and Super Dist. is outstanding!! Especially with such a great sustaining guitar.
The guitar on the right is an Ibanez RG. It has a Dimarzio Steve's Special in the bridge, Tone Zone in the neck, Lace Silver in the middle. I scrapped the 5-way in favor of Super-Strat wiring in this one too. This guitar is like the Hamer on steriods. Much higher output, faster, thinner wizard neck. With the 24-fret neck, it's probably the most versitile guitar I have. Another great studio guitar!!
So there you have it.. My rig is set. All pawn-shop and ebay specials. Initially I never paid more than $200 for any one of them. The upgrades were minor compared to what you would pay for guitars that perform this well brand new. Each has it's own identity and sounds. I feel like I'm ready to take on the world. I couldn't be happier with the results.
I did buy a Squier and Hamer that totaled $140 for both of them, and gave some of my others some real interesting changes. It took a few months, but now I have a nice complete collection that I can use for live gigs and recording. All wiring and intonation set-ups have been made, and I'd have to say it was well worth the time and effort.


So here's some pics of my new line-up of guitars for now. I don't really have the money to fix the rest right now, so this will be it for a while.

On the left is my Squier HM-3. It has a Dimarzio Steve's special in the bridge, the other pickups are basically dummies. The guitar has a coil tap and kill switch installed. It's an extremely light-weight, thin guitar. Nice for those 3-set nights when the weight can get to you with heavier, non-contoured bodies. The midrange is very controllable on this guitar. It's Ryan's favorite to use these days.
On the Right is my newest addition. It's the guitar you see the guts in above. I found this 1994 Hamer in a pawn shop for $90 and it's every bit as good as any $800 Strat. I wanted to take this one to the next level. I installed 2-Seymour Duncan JB jr and a Duckbucker middle. The wiring is Super-Strat wiring utilizing 3-toggle switches instead of a standard 3-way or 5-way switch. It creates 13 different sounds with this wiring design. With the Duncan pickups and some fine tuning setups, the guitar sounds as well as any guitar I can imagine now. Great for the studio!!

The guitar on the left of this pic has been my main live guitar for a while now. It's a Squier Stagemaster neck-through with 2 Seymour Duncan PA-TB1 installed. Standard 3-way switching. The PA-TB1s are the best sounding humbuckers I've run across so far. Very clean sounding in the clean channel, and with the sustain of the neck-through design, it screams like no other when distorted.
The guitar on the right is my other newest addition. It's a Squier Affinity body (bought the whole guitar for $50 and parted it out) with a Westone neck much like the HM-3 neck. I wired it up with an EVH pickguard. It has a Dimarzio Air Norton pickup wired straight to a volume knob. This thing is balls to the wall with a fast low action neck. Very Van Halen-esque to play.

The guitar on the left is my other Stagemaster. I went a different direction with this one and experimented a little. It has a Dimarzio HS-3 in the bridge, and a Super Distortion in the neck. The top vol. knob and 3-way switch have been dummied. It's wired with one vol., one tone knob, and a toggle switch to play either the Bridge or both. You get the best of both worlds here. The marriage of an HS-3 and Super Dist. is outstanding!! Especially with such a great sustaining guitar.
The guitar on the right is an Ibanez RG. It has a Dimarzio Steve's Special in the bridge, Tone Zone in the neck, Lace Silver in the middle. I scrapped the 5-way in favor of Super-Strat wiring in this one too. This guitar is like the Hamer on steriods. Much higher output, faster, thinner wizard neck. With the 24-fret neck, it's probably the most versitile guitar I have. Another great studio guitar!!
So there you have it.. My rig is set. All pawn-shop and ebay specials. Initially I never paid more than $200 for any one of them. The upgrades were minor compared to what you would pay for guitars that perform this well brand new. Each has it's own identity and sounds. I feel like I'm ready to take on the world. I couldn't be happier with the results.