nattiep wrote:brammy wrote:Perhaps they'll scratch out some buckle wear...
I said they were doing that. Dave's guitar has that beat though. Filled hole from a Kahler bridge.

Here's a shot of the additional switch with the filled in hole.

Here's your buckle wear.
Anyway, if anyone deserves a signature guitar (over people that get one for the hell of it because that's what they're playing at the time) it's David.
If any signature Fender's should be made fun of it's John Mayer's (ooooh, a racing stripe!) and Geddy Lee's. Hell, Ged got his bass in a pawn shop. That's pretty stock. He replaced the bridge. That's it. The neck's aren't all that different eiter. They still make basses with black blocks anyway.
Do you guys have to make fun of everything Fender does now?
It's an ugly, big headstock, Strat anyway, unless they're going to build it with the custom shop `57 reissue neck he has on it now. If they really wanted to make a cool DG Srat, they should have asked him what features he'd like in his ultimate dream Strat, as they have with some other players. I hope they aren't going to duplicate the filled in hole from the Kahler. That would be really lame.
A luthier I know recently made Dave Gilmour at least one custom Strat style guitar:
http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/index.c ... ID=1978718
WRT the Geddy Lee J Bass, it's reasonably priced, has the signature modestly placed on the back side of the headstock in a rather small script, and is the only Fender J bass available with a black finish, maple neck, and black block inlays-I just checked. It also has the vintage J bass pickups and a slimmed down neck. It's a great bass for the price, which is probably why GL was happy to put his name on it. The only thing it doesn't have are the bridge and p/u covers, which I really don't miss on that bass. I bought the bass because I liked the black finish contasted with the bound maple neck and black block inlays-I wasn't so concerned with the fact that it was a Geddy Lee bass. I was glad that the signature was on the back, and rather small at that.