Schecter Van Nuys Serial Numbers

This one's a parts guitar, as are almost all of the Van Nuys-era Schecters that you'll encounter. Same components as a Dream Machine, regardless. The body and neck are both from the latter part of that era, given their individual serial numbers. Schecter Van Nuys Stratocaster '80 Natural Mark Knopfler sound. Neck's serial number L7070 refers to Shedua wood (left handed neck) & F6060 refers to Teak wood.

Hello, Here is your chance to own a RARE and KILLER Early USA Schecter exotic woods from golden Van Nuys era. Loaded Pick guard is NOT original Van Nuys era I wouldn't sell if i didn't own a pretty rare Callaham S model which considered to be the best among the best strats out there. Shipping will be express airmail.

Excellent condition except a small scratch on the body (check last photo) and a few hairline scratches i can't even capture with my camera.Also gold saddles on the brass bridge show some oxidation. What we have here is a Shedua Neck and a pretty rare Teak wood body one piece. Ulichnaya serenada filjm It's a stunning grain pattern and tonally rich of harmonics. Really expensive piece of wood. Neck's serial number L7070 refers to Shedua wood (left handed neck) & F6060 refers to Teak wood according to Schecter catalog.

The electronics are EARLY Bartolini noiseless pickups. Shogun 2 total war blood mod free download for pc. They sound about as vintage Fender as you will find-except no hum! They sound phenomenal!

God these pups just rock. The bridge is a brass hardtail bridge, as all of that era Schecter guitars have. The body has been routed into a 'swimming pool' route for easy of changing pickup configurations. The neck is actually a left handed neck strung righty.This way you can achieve even more tight mids. The frets are in GREAT condition with plenty of life left. The nut is brass. The action is nice and low and the neck is typical Van Nuys Schecter.

This axe sounds killer, like an old vintage Strat should. I wouldn't change a thing on her the way she sounds or plays.I prefer this set of pups than the F-400 / F-500 that usually were loaded with,back in those days. That's why i'd not bother to purchase a 'dream machine' brass pickguard loaded with 3 mini toggle switches and f400/f500 or monster-tone pickups that come out for sale on Ebay. The third knob is do nothing as it is in all vintage strats.

The tuners are Kluson but according to the previous owner once had Schallers. Hard shell case included. Scroll down the page for youtube video. Thanks for looking.

Schecter Van Nuys Serial Numbers

This item is sold As-Described This item is sold As-Described and cannot be returned unless it arrives in a condition different from how it was described or photographed. Items must be returned in original, as-shipped condition with all original packaging. Product Specs Condition: Brand Model Finish Categories Year Made In United States Video.

About 10 years ago, I got a call from my favorite guitar shop to let me know they had an unusual instrument I might be interested in. They thought it might be a Schecter parts-o-caster, but weren't sure. It smelled like the real deal to me, and it played like buttah, so I plunked down my $300 and walked out the door with her. Flash forward 10 years, and I finally got the spare time to take the beast apart. In addition to the clearly visible Schecter external components (bridge, neck PU, black/aluminum pickguard), the two-piece mahogany body was branded with the Schecter logo in the neck PU cavity, and the mystery-wood neck was similarly branded where the sun don't shine. Here's the mystery, though: there are no serial/model numbers in the heel joint of the body, and the serial/model numbers in the neck are unknown to me. They also turned out to be unknown to Kelly Cash, a prominent Dallas-area guitar wizard and former early-80s Schecter employee.

While he said he was certain the guitar was '90% Schecter' (the 'wrong' bits: 1970s Fender tuning keys, mystery lead PU, mystery volume/tone control panel), he was flummoxed by the model numbers that there were on the neck, and that there weren't in the body. His best guess was that it was a '76-'79 guitar made up mostly of extremely early Schecter parts, possibly pre-dating their catalog and its numbering system. I'm going to try to post some pics in the hope that one of you Schecter nerds can help ID what I've got here. I really appreciate it! HVB Links to images. The neck appears to be pau ferro. The number is its serial number, and those were sequential.