Yeah, they're a bit much for a Mexican built guitar, but there was a $200 off coupon (although it wasn't that long ago the regular price was probably $200 less). So I said screw it, YOLO...
I was surprised that the neck is pretty much identical to my 2009 Fender American Standard Strat. I assumed since it was an EVH branded product, the neck would be a little thinner, like a Charvel. But it still feels good in the hand, so no complaints about the contour. Whatever they did to age the neck has a weird feel to it, but I expect as I play it, that'll smoothen out. It did, however, come setup and ready to play, and only required some slight tweaks to the fine tuners. Action is low, the D-Tuna works as advertised, the Wolfgang puckup sounds great (I may try a Frankenstein later on), and the paint doesn't have that weird transparent thing going on like the regular Striped series guitars do. And aside from the 1971D quarter, a slightly different selector switch in the middle pickup cavity, and the bicycle reflectors, it looks like the real thing. But you can tell that they used a sander to do the relicing. Thinking about going over those spots with some steel wool to smoothen out the look of the wear marks. And I may add a push-push volume knob, so I can switch the neck puckup into the circuit when I want (it's not hooked up at all now).
As far as what to play it through? Tried a few of my amps, but settled on the Placater (Friedman BE100) model in my Helix. Tried the Plexi models in it too, but the Placater won. But I did end up putting a 10 band EQ after the amp block and boosted the top end, because it still lacked that extra little sizzle that Eddie's tone has. Also, it should be noted that I run through a tube poweramp and into 4x12 cabs. So, that, and a little reverb, and there it is, the Brown Sound, in the flesh.
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