Most parts will fit. The neck and pickups will. The pickguard should. Two of the worst parts about the newer Starcasters are the wiring and pots. Strat electronics will be a huge upgrade. I'd think a MIM bridge would fit it, but you'd better measure that. The only piece that is odd on most of the newer Starcasters is the back plate. It is much larger than a Strat's and cannot be easily replaced.
of course fender telecaster From a player's standpoint, both are great. The Squire Affinity series - with an ash body - will be 'as good as' an American Tele once you change out the pickups to Seymore Duncan or Fender professional grade units. However, an American Fender Tele will always have much, much better resale & investment value. Even the lowest priced Squire Tele's (priced at about $215) are terrific once you swap out the pickups, tuners and have the frets dressed. All modern factory guitars are cut with computer-guided lathes. The fit and finish on even the lowest priced ones are much better than anything made in the 1970's. Leo Fender designed all his instruments to be low-priced, rugged and easy to repair. The 'classic' pre-CBS Fenders that now sell for up to tens of thousands of bucks now were all built by minimum-wage workers in Anaheim, CA.
Yes and no LOL Stratocaster necks come in every flavor reflecting the 55 years of contsruction and different mindsets of different owners at Fender during that time. Squire uses a variety of different necks on it's Stratocasters too. So that's the "no" part of the answer. With all the variety of Stratocaster necks out there almost no two are exactly alike, unless from the same plant in the same production run. You'll see variation in 21 or 22 frets, big or little headstock, maple or rosewood fingerboards, fretboard radii, nut width, fret wire, clay or plastic dots, white or black dots, curly or non-curly maple, stain tint, satin or glass finish, skunk stripe, and three or four bolt neck joint. There are other variables... almost too many to list. The "yes" part of the answer is that almost any 25.5" scale four bolt Strat neck made by Fender or Squier will bolt to any four bolt Fender or Squier Strat body and be VERY playable. Exceptions to this rule are very rare, and it is part of the genius of Leo's original design. Four bolt Strat necks typically fit Tele bodies, but Tele necks almost never fit Strat bodies.
no, it wouldn't. also, fender necks are bolt on, les paul necks are glued in.
Are there multiple years
if it doesn't check out the ibanez forums, I was hanging out with one of my friends and she had a strat with no whammy bar so I took the whammy bar off my BC Rich guitar and because it was a different kind (floyd rose) it wouldn't work on her fender stratocaster lookalike. there should be no installation , just put it in I mean the metal is already prepared and a direct replacement, if you can get your money back go for it.
No you can't, the bullet style doesn't fit into the cavity of my Mexican strat.
Yes. They are the same.
With different fender contours it would not be an exact fit
no
A CRF fender can fit on a 2001 XR250 with slight modification. The rear of the fender will need to be trimmed as it will not clear the body of the motorcycle from the front fork.?æ
No it will not fit......Jack
Yes it is the same fender.
NO!
Yes, Fender owns and makes Squier. It's like Gibson and Epiphone.
Not without changing a lot of other parts, radiator support grills fender moldings and stone shield.
of course fender telecaster From a player's standpoint, both are great. The Squire Affinity series - with an ash body - will be 'as good as' an American Tele once you change out the pickups to Seymore Duncan or Fender professional grade units. However, an American Fender Tele will always have much, much better resale & investment value. Even the lowest priced Squire Tele's (priced at about $215) are terrific once you swap out the pickups, tuners and have the frets dressed. All modern factory guitars are cut with computer-guided lathes. The fit and finish on even the lowest priced ones are much better than anything made in the 1970's. Leo Fender designed all his instruments to be low-priced, rugged and easy to repair. The 'classic' pre-CBS Fenders that now sell for up to tens of thousands of bucks now were all built by minimum-wage workers in Anaheim, CA.
I doubt very much that the fender is the same as the darts.