1993 Fender Japan Stratocaster Mini Electric Guitar




Number two! This is the second of two Fender Japan Strat Minis I've just finished-up and this one will be up for consignment. It's the cleaner of them and all-original save for (huge upgrade) replacement Gotoh Kluson-style tuners.

As I mentioned before, these Japan-made Minis are much superior guitars to the current line of "Squier Mini" products. The whole construction feels much more like a real guitar and the quality level is the same of most Fender Japan output in the early '90s -- meaning... excellent! The body is a solid slab, the hardware is all good, and the only things that were a letdown (the original tuners) have been replaced.

Because of the shorter scale (18 1/2") compared to a Squier Mini (22 3/4"), these instruments handle more like a guitar-mandolin than they do a fractional guitar. To me this is a lot more fun because you can play superhero-style lead work on them as the stretches are so short. The first thing I did with this when I plugged it in was to simply zip around all over the fretboard like a headless chicken.

Also, with the two-pickup configuration and the farther spread of the pickups, you get more of that Fender "middle position" querve sound going on -- and you have a space to actually fit your pick in compared to what this would be like with 3 pickups mounted on it.

So, in short (hah), this is a pro-quality specialty plank that affords you all sorts of interesting opportunities that you won't get with a normal-scale instrument. I currently have it tuned G-to-G above E-to-E with a set of 10s, but stringing lighter (9s or 8s) will get you to A or B above this. A uke player would be fairly comfortable tuned A-to-A as that's ADGCEA low to high, with the top 4 string GCEA being the same pitch as low-G ukulele.

Repairs included: a fret level/dress, install of new Gotoh Kluson-style (15:1) tuners -- a huge upgrade, cleaning, and setup.

Setup notes: action is dead-on at a hair under 1/16" overall at the 12th fret. The neck is straight. I have the trem/whammy set with its rear deck raised a bit so you can do up-bends on the whammy. If you like your bridge flat to the top at rest, I can always set this up to taste -- but I love up-bends, myself.

Scale length: 18 1/2"
Nut width: 1 1/2"
String spacing at nut: 1 1/4"
String spacing at bridge: 2 1/8"
Body length: 15"
Lower bout width: 10 3/4"
Waist width: 7 3/4"
Upper bout width: 9 1/2"
Side depth at endpin: 1 5/8"
Body wood: basswood?
Neck wood: maple
Fretboard: rosewood, synthetic nut
Bridge: Strat, vintage-style saddles
Neck feel: slim C-shape, ~10" board radius

Condition notes: it's pretty clean overall with just light scuffs and playwear throughout. There's one filled old screw-hole north of the tuners on the back of the headstock and the tuners are all replacements. Otherwise it's original throughout.












Comments

Unknown said…
Hi there
I just wanted to know where you found this guitar?
Do you sell or do you know where I could find expect on ebay or reverb?
Best regards
Fabrice
Melsig said…
Can you tell me if one of these doesn't have the serial number on the neck, it's a fake? I just found one in marketplace, but I don't see a serial number there. They claim it's a Made in Japan, but it has a waterside decal. I'm so frustrated trying to find more info. Thank you for this post!
Unknown said…
I am selling a black one like this if anyone is interested.
Vibe Mountain said…
Hi - did you have to drill new holes for the tuners to get the peg through?
DanMan said…
I’d be interested unknown if you still have it
Christian said…
I just picked one of these up in black with the 3 pickup config. The neck is straight and true. These guitars can be found on eBay now but they are expensive and from Japan. I was lucky enough to find one near me so I could check it out before buying. To anyone interested in these just remember that there is no truss rod so you should be making sure the fretboard is straight upon purchase. As stated here the tuners are garbage. I will be swapping those out along with installing the EMG David Gilmour pickups. Since the DG20 only fits a normal sized strat I will be using the individual pots as there is a large circuit board on the prewired pickguard kit. It truely is a badass little guitar.