Which should I choose?

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mjr

mjr

ADD -- blessing and curse
If you were choosing a Strat style guitar, which would you choose, and why?

1. HSS configuration with roseacre (dark) fretboard
2. SSS configuration with maple fretboard

Keep in mind I have the following electric guitars already:

1. "Crate" Electra Strat-style electric, in a HSS config with the dark fretboard
2. Fender telecaster (2 single coils) with a maple fretboard
3. Gibson LPJ with dual humbuckers

I'm considering "replacing" my Strat-Style Crate Electra with another one, and I'm thinking about these two configurations. They're comparably priced.
 
The best way is to have a guitar that fits comfortably in your hands. Have it set up properly so it plays correct. String over the pickup pins. String height. Nut action height (lower/cut the nut). Pickup type. Intonation. Any neck crooks can be clamped and relaxed and retrussed.

My Stratocaster is SSS. Single has more bite with less chunk. A guitar should last a lifetime.

Line up the strings spacing like so

20210325_101225-jpg.109077
20210325_112227-jpg.109080

Not like this
screenshot-2021-03-18-185115-jpg.108894
 
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My Strat is an SSS with maple fretboard. I had a Les Paul but fell in love with the Strat's clarity and more musical tones. I miss the LP, but I'd miss my Strat more.
 
Then find ADA amplifiers from 80's-1996 ( Mr Big. Winger. White Lion. Babylon. etc.)

or CAE 3+ from 80's-1991 ( Van Halen ForUnlawfulCarnalKnowledge, to Greenday Dookie)
 
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I have two, a Fender Strat and a G&L Legacy. Both are SSS with maple fretboards. Likewise for my Melancon T and ASAT. I have rosewood and ebony on my 24.5" guitars.
 
G&L make excellent guitars. Yeah, don't buy cheap. Get something nice. Something you can be proud of.

Wire it up to take advantage of electonics. 2 humbuckers work well with Jimmy Page wiring LP style or Fat Five on Superswitch( 21 sounds). SSS Has great options phase/tone defeat/series parallel, etc.
 
Gonna throw this out there, on your quest for a better guitar..

Instead of the normal subtractive tone knob. Use a push pull, to make a variable half out of phase circuit. In the down position its a normal tone control. Knob up, it is variable half out of phase. This VHOP control works better in some instances than a tone knob, for tones. The blending effect adjusts the tone with phase making it brighter.
 
I have a PRS Silver Sky and have fallen in love with it.
Am seriously looking at the PRS Fiore for that Humbucker bridge goodness.
 
My main two electrics are an HH and a SSS and I use both and they cover a lot of ground. You can split the coil of an HSS but it won't have the same sparkle of a SSS. That said if I was limited to one guitar I might be inclined to use an HSS to get both the H and S voicings.
 
If you already have a guitar with humbuckers, I'd get the SSS personally.
 
So the bridge pickup on the SSS does not have a tone control(the tone knobs work on the middle and neck pickups only) and is VERY bright. It is not used very often on it's own because of these characteristics. I have SSS, two SSD and a DD and though I love the SSS sound I almost never use the bridge pickup by itself and when I do I tend to lower the volume to reduce the spikey-ness to something useful. YMMV. I like to have a coil tapped humbucker in the bridge position because it is more versatile and when in single coil mode is not as spiky as a single strat pickup .
 
So the bridge pickup on the SSS does not have a tone control(the tone knobs work on the middle and neck pickups only) and is VERY bright. It is not used very often on it's own because of these characteristics. I have SSS, two SSD and a DD and though I love the SSS sound I almost never use the bridge pickup by itself and when I do I tend to lower the volume to reduce the spikey-ness to something useful. YMMV. I like to have a coil tapped humbucker in the bridge position because it is more versatile and when in single coil mode is not as spiky as a single strat pickup .

This is funny, because it points out exactly why there is no real answer to this question as EVERYONE has different taste. I personally would ONLY use the Bridge pickup and I'd not mind if there was no tone control, because I wouldn't use it anyhow... ALL UP! Bright as possible. I hate and would never use a Neck pickup/tone rolled off sound. Heh.
 
If you were choosing a Strat style guitar, which would you choose, and why?

1. HSS configuration with roseacre (dark) fretboard
2. SSS configuration with maple fretboard
I have a single humbucker (bridge position) strat with rosewood fretboard and an SSS strat with maple. Personally, I vastly prefer the SSS even though the humbucker one has a coil-tap for single coil mode. The SSS can cover more ground and is much clearer when used with fuzz pedals. Sounds "great" for my ears and the style I play. I can't really use the humbucker strat. Also, a maple neck feels a lot better to me.

It really is all personal preference.
 
This is funny, because it points out exactly why there is no real answer to this question as EVERYONE has different taste. I personally would ONLY use the Bridge pickup and I'd not mind if there was no tone control, because I wouldn't use it anyhow... ALL UP! Bright as possible. I hate and would never use a Neck pickup/tone rolled off sound. Heh.
whereas I only roll off the tone on a bridge pickup never on a neck.
 
Why would you pick a personal instrument based on other people’s choice. You don’t even do that in a restaurant. Opinions are great to confirm you made sensible choices, but having had a strat or three all I want from them is a comfortable neck and a trem that keeps in tune and doesn’t creak.
 
Usually the Bridge has no tone. Wiring..Is it TBX?

Screenshot 2022-07-27 110347.webp
 
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