Guitars from that particular Korean factory are all very good: Schecter, PRS SE, ESP LTD, Chapman, Agile, and others like the legendary Tokai S-types. They have quite a history with some excellent craftspeople. My ~$300 Agile ST-625EB could easily go for 2~3x what I paid -- all solid woods, parts and fret work.
Wenge is an excellent neck or FB wood with a tone like Ebony and smooth feel. The only thing about it is it tends to smell literally like crap as it absorbs sweat. I'd take a preventative measure to seal it right away. I'd try Tung Oil or similar, and clean it every string change with something like Murphy's Oil Soap or Howard Feed-N-Wax. I use the later on my porous necks and FB's. It only takes a few minutes, but you may need a small brush to get inside the large pores. Could be messy, but might be worth it. The orange oil penetrates and cleans, while the beeswax seals and leaves a velvety feel that doesn't get tacky due to the orange oil keeping it viscous.
I don't know what an A-Pig is, but the result of all those hard & dense woods, thick Stainless saddles, and high Inductance Fe core pickups makes for a midrangy guitar. If splitting the pickups to parallel mode doesn't do it for you, you could try wiring a ~$35 Wilde 'Q-Filter' onto a P/P pot. The passive LCR circuit functions as a tone knob above ~5, but dips the midrange and increases the peak freq without affecting bass as you turn the knob down below ~5 -- especially useful for high inductance pickups. I love mine. I'd consider replacing split mode with it.