The wide range HB and the Jazzmaster are things guys like us obsess over, but having done sales I can say that they are a very marginal (at best) part of the catalog. Jason put a lot of work into the WR humbucker, and I'd bet he doesn't actually make money on it considering the costs of research, tooling and production. I may be wrong, but I might be right enough to show that it may not make sense for Fender to do that for a pickup on a Mexican made instrument. I think it is a labor of love that they are even in production as much as they are. Yeah, they don't hit it out of the park every time. In fact, they have a lot of issues like that precisely because their catalog is too big for them to handle (or their salesmen), and that is my biggest gripe about them. Around 2000-2001, they reduced the catalog dramatically and it was their best move. Now they're bigger than ever.
They are definitely not Gibson! Gibson hates their dealers - they make threats to shut their best dealers down all the time and make huge demands. They treat warranty people so badly no one wants to do warranty work for them. They were voted in a non-industry survey as one of the worst places to work (does anyone remember where that article came from?), and this is before considering production problems. Sorry, but for me, comparing a guitar company to Gibson is like comparing a leader to Hitler. You do it for dramatic effect, but you never REALLY mean it. Fender is respectful to their employees, dealers and customers. They mess things up, but they really do try hard to make a good, hip product. I think they work too hard on the "hip" part and not hard enough on the "good" part, but I'm more of a believer in the fundamentals of luthiery than the average sales director.
I haven't seen those shielding issues. I sometimes see weird issues similar to that, and they end up corrected after a little while. Again, I think this is because they have too many instruments in the line up. Some tech needs to go out on the factory floor and show everyone how to do all of this stuff and explain why it is important, or it'll never happen. The average factory worker very well may be a guitar player, but they aren't a tech or luthier and aren't likely to know these things. They are making too many models, and this stuff falls between the cracks. There are absolute gems in the line up and sometimes in the strangest places, but there is so much fluff of them trying to get every permutation of every feature that has been available for the past 60 years.
I'm still curious about the injection molded p-bass bobbin. Not every P-bass (or j-bass or strat or whatever) is intended to be faithful. If it isn't specifically a reissue then there is essentially no attempt to be true to any vintage model, and even then it depends on which price point. The Fender sales guys have no problem admitting this, and I think the website even says it in a sort of evasive language. The Mexican reissues are only supposed to be about 60-70% right, the US Vintage series about 90% and the Custom Shop are supposed to be dead ringers. I'd say they're all about right except the Custom Shop... I've never been fooled by one or their relics. Occasionally I'll find one that looks pretty good, but never that had me guessing.
They are definitely not Gibson! Gibson hates their dealers - they make threats to shut their best dealers down all the time and make huge demands. They treat warranty people so badly no one wants to do warranty work for them. They were voted in a non-industry survey as one of the worst places to work (does anyone remember where that article came from?), and this is before considering production problems. Sorry, but for me, comparing a guitar company to Gibson is like comparing a leader to Hitler. You do it for dramatic effect, but you never REALLY mean it. Fender is respectful to their employees, dealers and customers. They mess things up, but they really do try hard to make a good, hip product. I think they work too hard on the "hip" part and not hard enough on the "good" part, but I'm more of a believer in the fundamentals of luthiery than the average sales director.
I haven't seen those shielding issues. I sometimes see weird issues similar to that, and they end up corrected after a little while. Again, I think this is because they have too many instruments in the line up. Some tech needs to go out on the factory floor and show everyone how to do all of this stuff and explain why it is important, or it'll never happen. The average factory worker very well may be a guitar player, but they aren't a tech or luthier and aren't likely to know these things. They are making too many models, and this stuff falls between the cracks. There are absolute gems in the line up and sometimes in the strangest places, but there is so much fluff of them trying to get every permutation of every feature that has been available for the past 60 years.
I'm still curious about the injection molded p-bass bobbin. Not every P-bass (or j-bass or strat or whatever) is intended to be faithful. If it isn't specifically a reissue then there is essentially no attempt to be true to any vintage model, and even then it depends on which price point. The Fender sales guys have no problem admitting this, and I think the website even says it in a sort of evasive language. The Mexican reissues are only supposed to be about 60-70% right, the US Vintage series about 90% and the Custom Shop are supposed to be dead ringers. I'd say they're all about right except the Custom Shop... I've never been fooled by one or their relics. Occasionally I'll find one that looks pretty good, but never that had me guessing.
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