Fender 2013 Classic Series 50s Ash Telecaster Lacquer White Blonde Tele 48470
Description (more pics below)
You're looking at a 2013 Fender Classic Series 50s Telecaster Lacquer in White Blonde finish. Great playing condition with mild play wear. Features:
-- Ash body w/ white nitro transparent finish
-- Tinted C-shape 7.25" radius maple neck
-- American vintage ashtray bridge w/ barrel saddles
-- Single-ply white pickguard
This guitar is a light player with some small marks mostly around the edges (see pics). Frets are in very good shape with only some very slight wear. Weight is 7 pounds, 14 ounces. No case. I do a full setup and expert packing: details below. Thanks for looking!
What You Get
-- Full setup, cleaning, and new strings.
-- FREE USA shipping.
-- 30-day return policy.
-- Ship within 1 business day--pro packing.
Manufacturer Info
For guitarists who must have the instrument's original-era tone, look and feel, the Classic Series '50s Telecaster Lacquer epitomizes the guitar in the decade of its debut, with unmistakable early Tele® style and snap. With its authentic vintage-style features and nitrocellulose lacquer finish in classic White Blonde, everything about it takes you back to the time of diners, "Ike for President," cars with fins, two-stepping western swing, a wild new kind of music called rock 'n' roll, and an upstart little Southern California company called Fender.
Maple neck with “C”-shaped profile
7.25”-radius maple fingerboard with 21 vintage-style frets
Dual vintage-style single-coil Telecaster pickups with three-way switching
Single-ply white pickguard
American Vintage string-through-body Telecaster bridge with three chrome “barrel” saddles
Guitar Setup
Setup includes new strings (9s or 10s depending on what the nut is cut for), overall polish, cleaning any gunk off fingerboard, oiling neck, and polishing frets when necessary. We spray out any pots that are noisy, turn the truss rod (if necessary) and set string height at low-to-medium action depending on string buzz present. Since setup is highly subjective you may need to get it set to your particular needs by your personal luthier. Basses get the same treatment minus the string change. Thanks!
Packing
I use quality boxes, thick bubble wrap, and peanuts to pack guitars. I have a very high rate of successful guitar and bass shipping (meaning few damaged instruments). I have been doing this 15 years and know how to pack well--with or without a hard case. I wrote a detailed story with photos on how I pack a guitar, which you can find on my StillKickinMusic site blog. If you Google "Still Kickin - How to Pack a Guitar" you will find it. Thanks.