FENDER TELECASTER FOTO FLAME 1994-95 MIJ TELE Nice! 25302
You're looking at a 1994-95 Fender Telecaster Foto Flame amber made in Japan. Incredibly beautiful flame top body and flame maple neck, with frets in good condition. You can feel the quality of this 25 year vintage Japanese made instrument when you hold it in your hands. Neck and frets are in great shape. These were made at the fabled Fuji Gen Gakki factory, and they rivaled the USA Fender's of the day (making Fender very nervous about the USA line, eventually moving production of these to Mexico). This has the split flame maple look on the body and the flame back of neck with the "hamburgler" pattern. (You can read about that online.) The Foto Flame line has a storied reputation for high quality. This one has some cracking in the clear coat, which is common on these. Also the pickups have been upgraded with EMG's, which is a good thing since the factory pickups were a weak point on these.
Output jack upgraded to Electro-Socket type. Couple of dings shown in pics have already been filled, sanded and buffed, so they are smooth. Weight is 7 pounds, 4 ounces. I do a full cleaning and setup on all guitars. (Details on my setups and packing at bottom of listing.) Thanks for looking.
What You Get
-- Full setup and cleaning.
-- FREE USA shipping.
-- 30-day return policy.
-- Ship within 1 business day--pro packing.
-- Full setup and cleaning.
-- FREE USA shipping.
-- 30-day return policy.
-- Ship within 1 business day--pro packing.
Guitar Setup
All our setups are done by our in-house trained luthier. 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 10 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 "THERE IN ONE PIECE...How to Pack a Guitar" you will find it. Thanks.