Accidental damage, normalNormal wear and power surges are no longer an issue with these comprehensive and affordable plans. We even pay to ship your gear for repairs. More details.
Covers much more than the original manufacturer's warranty:
Damage due to unexpected and unintentional spills, drops and impacts
Damage due to normal wear and tear
Damage caused by lightning/power surge
Damage due to dust, internal heat, humidity, heavy usage
No Lemon Policy on merchandise over $200- if it fails for the same reason 3 times, it is replaced on the 4th breakdown
Complete refund in the event of failure or substandard performance on merchandise under $200 (Gift Certificate sent for the full price plus applicable sales tax paid)
Manufacturer's Specs Coverage -- The product does not need to fail to be covered. If the product does not perform as it did the first day you bought it, we will repair or replace it so that it does
Free shipping to and from repair facility
Plans are transferable in the event merchandise is sold
Limit of Liability: The least of the cost of (1) authorized repairs, (2) replacement with a product of similar features, (3) reimbursement for authorized repairs or replacement or (4) the price that you paid for the product.
*Limitations and exclusions apply. See terms and conditions for program details
Squier welcomes its first-ever Mustang guitar to the family in the sleekly diminutive form of the Vintage Modified Mustang. With its distinctive 24” scale, dual pickup switches and floating bridge with dynamic vibrato tailpiece, it's a classic modded with present-day touches including full-sounding Duncan Designed pickups and a 9.5 fingerboard radius.
Players have done it for years. Whether installing hotter pickups, different pickguards or just plain personalizing their instruments with distinctive paint jobs, modified means adding new twists to familiar designs. Squier's Vintage Modified series excels at just that, imparting hot-output chop-shop sound, feel and value to traditional instrument designs.
Squier Vintage Modified Mustang Electric Guitar
Features:
Maple neck with vintage-tint gloss finish Rosewood fingerboard with 22 medium jumbo frets and parchment dot inlays Mustang single-coil pickups with aged covers On/Off-phase (in/out) slider switch for each pickup Master black skirted volume and tone knobs Tortoiseshell or white pearloid pickguards Floating bridge with dynamic vibrato tailpiece and vintage-style tremolo arm Vintage-style white-tipped tuners
Squier Vintage Modified Mustang Electric Guitar
Specifications:
Body: Basswood Body Shape: Mustang® Series: Vintage Modified Neck: Maple, "C" Shape Fingerboard: Rosewood Finger Board Radius: 9.5" (24.1 cm) Frets: 22, Medium Jumbo Scale Length: 24" (61 cm) Nut Width: 1.650 (42 mm) Hardware: Chrome Tuning Keys: Vintage-style white-tipped Bridge: Floating Bridge with Dynamic Vibrato Tail-piece Pickguard: White Pearloid, Tortoiseshell Pickups: Duncan Designed SC-101B single-coil Duncan Designed SC-101N single-coil Pickup Switching: On/off, phase slider switch for each pickup (in/out) Controls: On/off, phase slider switch for each pickup (in/out), master volume, master tone Strings: NPS, .010-.046 Gauges Unique Features: Duncan Designed pickups, floating bridge with dynamic vibrato tailpiece, white-tipped tuning machines, gold-and-black Squier logo, engraved neck plate, parchment dot position inlays, Vintage appropriate gap between the control plate and the pickguard
When I bought this guitar I was ecstatic because I finally had a mustang guitar just like my hero Kurt Cobain, even if this is a low end model. Well isn't this what grunge is all about? So I bought it. Initially I noticed no problems with it besides buzz from a perceived low action and a pingy sound. I now know that the sound came from the vibrato tailpiece. However this was only because that's just how these types of tailpieces work, okay fine. So I'm ecstatic fix up the guitar, tune her up, I have an open mic night at my college in a week. Sounds great through the week, the night comes. Sound check went over fine. Played my first song, bam like a train low e string for whatever reason goes into super buzz so bad that you can clearly hear it through the amp. Luckily I'm always able to change up a setlist of mine because I know my own songs so well, I switched to a more distortion driven song where the buzz wouldn't be too bad. Cool off stage blah, I was pissed but I fixed her up again. After that, every other time I would play this guitar, it would be horribly buzzy. I looked up reviews online and found out that the tailpiece is a major factor of this, turns out Kurt didn't even like the tail piece so he turned it around to avoid the vibrato and a lot of people were having trouble with the saddle screws being loose and causing this buzz and would require all new saddles. I just didn't have the money at the time and I felt that this guitar was not something I wanted to put money into to sound semi-decent, when money should be put into making a good guitar even better. So I took it back to the mom and pop shop where I bought it, they offered me $150 for it, plus more for trade in, plus more because I purchased it there in the first place. Still trying to find a replacement. But until then I have my Squier Bullet Telecaster (Guitar Center in-store special two years ago) which sounds better than the mustang and I love it.
sorry for the novel :3
this guitar is awesome!it plays super duper well and the tuners are not bad for a squier. it's quite light and has a nice ringing tone when unplugged. the pickups are punchy and sound great clean or distorted. getting telecaster sounds is easy to do as well making it great for blues, rock, punk etc. the tremelo works unlike other types. overall it's built well and sounds great. just make sure you get the allen wrenches and tremelo arm with it.
I am not very happy with the Vintage Modified Mustang. The neck fit is awful, there is a big gap on one side. The Classic Vibes are much better made in China than the VM range made in Indonesia. I would have preferred to pay a bit more to have the Chinese quality. I did not get an allen key for the trem arm or the tailpiece adjustment. there is also no manual included, so good luck if you need help figuring the bridge out. The thing just rattles and buzzes and does not stay in tune. i am trying to find out where to place the tailpiece to best alleviate this. If you want a Mustang, go for the more expensive ones in my opinion. Squier makes some great guitars, the classic vibe range is streets ahead of these vintage modified ones. there was also a ding in the side of the neck of mine. The tuners are rubbish also.
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