Should you even mess with it? That's probably the number one philosophical question for the guitarist. I assume anyone reading this probably already has at least one guitar and it's likely fine—you can play it, it makes noises, and you can probably plug it into an amp to make it louder.
But tinkering with guitars produces little hits of dopamine. Dopamine makes you feel good. Let's be honest, it's kind of like drugs, but I'm betting it's on the non-problematic-and-probably-good-for-you side of the spectrum. I find the tinkering therapeutic, and I get as much out of messing with the guitars as I do from playing them.
That said, you should know đź’€ The Dangers đź’€ of what you're getting into.
Guitar / Gear Acquisition Syndrome (GAS)
GAS is an addiction of sorts: "an urge to acquire and accumulate lots of gear". GAS is not just limited to Guitar stuff, of course, and afflicts those in other realms such as photography, and cars (even though car-nuts strangely don't call it GAS). Be careful out there.
Should you mod your guitar?
Building a guitar: Partscasters
A partscaster is a guitar built from parts. You can build the guitar of your dreams—exactly the shape and color you want, with boutique pickups and that exotic neck wood in just the right contour.
A couple things to know about them:
- They can be built for about ~$400 and up. To build a partscaster in the $400 range you will probably need to find rad deals on used parts. A nice one out of new parts clocks in at around the $1,000 - $1,500 range. Really the sky is the limit, though.
- Be aware of resale value! They usually fetch much less used as a whole unit than the cost of the parts.
- Partscasters are often Stratocaster or Telecaster replicas due to readily available parts that work together.
- You don't need to buy genuine OEM parts. There are several companies making very high-quality aftermarket bodies, necks, etc. such as Warmoth and MJT . In fact two of my Strat partscasters have 0 Fender parts on them.
(Telecaster) Show your Partscasters Inspiration for a Telecaster build
(Stratocaster) Showing Off Partscasters Inspiration for a Stratocaster build
Next: Set it Up
Now you're all geared up to mod your guitar or build a new one. All those changes will require a setup. Learn about setting up your own guitar in part 3 →