Randy Van Sykes":3snnvuz1 said:
Vrad":3snnvuz1 said:
In my limited experience of assembling guitars I have found that an electric guitar is a system and it's greater than the sum of it's parts. That said, I feel tone woods do make an impact on the sound but not nearly to the extent I would have previously thought. Electronics aside, I have found that the neck and bridge seem to make more of an impact on the overall tone than the body does. I have guitars that I have assembled that have premium necks and bodies and guitars that have premium necks and run-of-the-mill bodies and both sound equally good. In short, I wouldn't skimp on the neck and the bridge but I would get a "regular" quality body.
That's my 2 cents.
I hear a pretty big difference with necks as well, especially maple vs rosewood fretboards.
My favorite sounding strat that I've played is a '92 MIM. It has a rosewood fretboard and a light weight poplar body. Is poplar a tonewood?

Sounds great to me.
Yup. I've noticed the same thing. I hear differences between between flat-sawn and quarter-sawn.
And I REALLY hear a difference between different bridges. Even crazier I hear a difference between chrome and black Floyd Roses as well as different saddles for vintage trems. I hear all that more than whether the body is alder, ash or basswood etc...