Thought some folks here may either be interested or at least get a kick out of it.
Amazing, painstaking effort appears to have gone into it.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Frankenstrat-projec ... dZViewItem

Moderators: VelvetGeorge, RACKSYSTEMS
BrownSound1 wrote:Some guys can really do nice replicas for sure. I've always wanted the Frankie, but in its original white/black paint scheme. I dunno, I've always dug that thing with the black pickguard and all. Would love to have a copy of his Destroyer too. I just can't afford the asking price for most full replicas. Of course I do realize there have been many hours of work put in to those, but hell..some of 'em cost more than a boutique amp!!
I'm not really commenting on the way they sound, just that hard ash would've been more *accurate* to the guitar that's being copied. Some people debate about what wood that guitar is, but if you've ever had a hard ash body you can pretty easily tell from pictures of Eddie's guitar that it was hard ash. Not to mention the sound properties that are apparent in recordings, and people who've worked on the guitar also saying it's hard ash.AnotherBrother wrote:I thought swamp ash is a good sounding wood, is hard ash better sounding?Bainzy wrote:Just a bit of a shame it's swamp ash instead of hard ash, as that would make the perfect replica body for someone who's into that.
True enough. I do think the Strat is noticeable at times. Particularly on WACF...more noticeable just how much chunkier what sounds to be the Ibanez is and what track(s) it's on.Bainzy wrote:That's probably why the guitar tone doesn't really change from song to song - both his Frankenstrat and Explorer had Hard Ash bodies and PAF style pickups.