There are many places you can buy parts to build your own, such as a DIY guitar site. Alternatively, you could remove the neck pickup in any telecaster and seal the recess. You may want to also remove the 3-way selector and solder the wiring in the fixed bridge position.
Fender Strat or Tele, bridge pickup, through a tube amp pushed into distortion by cranking up the gain.
Get a good les paul and coil-tap the bridge position humbucker. When you split the coils it will give you a tele-type sound. Not exact, but with a medium-output bridge humbucker it will work.
guitar tuners - grovers I suggest a nut for the guitars strings to sit on at the end of the neck neck neck plate with bolts telecaster style pickguard pickups a bridge screws a control center metal knurled knobs electronics - pots , a capacitor , tele style 3 way selector , input jack a tele style bridge a body - alder I suggest plastic covers for the electronic cavities a good painting tutorial can be found on youtube , remember to use nitrocellous lacquer to get that authentic tone and try ebay or google "guitar project kit" I sell them on a classified site but your best bet is to get them off ebay they are reasonably priced in America. If you live in a big city buy a used one and customize it for practice.
Morris code, tele-graph, light signals on ships.
If by "twang", you mean a tinny or high timbrel sound, any amp can do this by turning down the bass level, raising the midrange and treble a little. Turn the gain or distortion up just s fraction and pick the strings closer to the bridge, you will get the sound you are after. It would be like the classic sound of The Shadows.
In my opinion, it is because of the bridge pickup being mounted directly to the tele-style bridge. The bridge pickup being a single coil and a maple neck and fingerboard (although some do have other materials) also contribute to maximum twang. To me. the neck pickup doesn't have the same twang and is very similar to some strats neck pickup tones.
Are you asking how do you get a Telecaster sound from a Les paul?, or are you asking how do you get a Les paul from a Telecaster. If you want a Les Paul sound from a Telecaster, have the stock Tele single coil pickups exchanged for "humbucking" style pickups, and this will give you a sound very similar to what you're looking for..... If you're trying to get a Tele sound from a Les Paul, have an EMG series "89" pickup installed in the bridge position on the Tele. The series "89" pickup has a push-pull pot which separates the single coil (on top) from the double coil (on bottom). Use the pot in the "up" position to give you a sound very similar to the Telecaster.
Fender Strat or Tele, bridge pickup, through a tube amp pushed into distortion by cranking up the gain.
Not without some serious modifications. The most common use of a strat pickup in a telecaster is to add a strat pickup in the middle position. In order to do this, one must route the guitar's body and pickguard to accommodate the pickup. This configuration often requires a 5 way pickups selector switch, which means replacing the stock 3 way switch of a telecaster. Unfortunately strat pickups cannot replace tele pickups without routing. The telecaster neck has different dimensions than a strat pickup, and the bridge pickup has a special mounting.
Get a good les paul and coil-tap the bridge position humbucker. When you split the coils it will give you a tele-type sound. Not exact, but with a medium-output bridge humbucker it will work.
Its a Fender Tele bass. It looks like a Mike Dirnt Signature but its not the same thing. Its got a P bass pickup in it, a tele bass pickguard and controls, and a C profile Tele neck. You can get a normal P bass to sound the exact same way. Basically its a neck prefernce choice, but the P bass and Tele bass get the same sound.
The average cost for a Fender Tele guitar varies greatly depending on size, age, and style. The average cost for one of these can vary from $100-$1,500 depending on these conditions.
the godzhell codes are::anti::tele #####,##### or ##### #####::bank::runes::arrows::portals::pickup (note:doesn't work nymore)::starter:0 tyi neeed the codes for the members shop can u give me the tele? 02331 03171The code for ags::go the ags (no spaces)
guitar tuners - grovers I suggest a nut for the guitars strings to sit on at the end of the neck neck neck plate with bolts telecaster style pickguard pickups a bridge screws a control center metal knurled knobs electronics - pots , a capacitor , tele style 3 way selector , input jack a tele style bridge a body - alder I suggest plastic covers for the electronic cavities a good painting tutorial can be found on youtube , remember to use nitrocellous lacquer to get that authentic tone and try ebay or google "guitar project kit" I sell them on a classified site but your best bet is to get them off ebay they are reasonably priced in America. If you live in a big city buy a used one and customize it for practice.
The first version Tele basses with the single-coil pickup were produced from 1968 to 1971-ish, and the second series with the humbucker was 1972 to 1977.
tele = "television"
The English prefix 'tele' is from the Greek word 'tele' meaning 'far.'