I've also read that Dweezil owns the so-called "Miami" sunburst Strat, which was also torched and had much of its finish burned off, a few weeks after Monterey.
Does Dweezil have both? Or is there some confusion over this?
OK, back to the Chinese replica. How about some nitpicking?
We can start with the backplate. In typical Chinese style, the mounting screw pattern is symmetrical, the string holes do not line up with the holes in the mass block, and the plate is injection-molded and textured. Basically, this is a Chinese replacement part with the Monterey logos hot-stamped on it.
The actual $15-or-so-K FCS plate has the asymmetric screw pattern, is smooth, shiny and thin, being router-cut from a single piece of 1/16" ABS. The holes line up. The logos appear to be hot-stamped, as well, at least from photos.
Next, the neck plate. The Chinese replica has a laser-engraved portrait of Jimi, and the plate is (typical for China) set into a black injection-molded polyethylene shock gasket. You will nearly always see these on Chinese bolt-neck guitars to prevent neck pocket splitting in transit. I remove them right away, though the plate is of a thinner gauge than a genuine Fender plate.
The original guitar carried a 1965 "L" serial number. The FCS item has a laser-engraved line portrait of Jimi and no other legend (pun intended). No shock gasket; thicker metal gauge.
Yes, the Chinese guitar is too yellowed: it should be off-white, not "harngelb",
Sharp-eyed viewers will also note that the Chinese have done this backwards. Jimi started with a Fiesta Red guitar and a can of cheap white spray enamel, then added the graphics on top of the white and red; the Chinese factory started with a white guitar, then Tampo-printed the graphics over the white and sprayed red tint over both white and graphics, turning the blue areas of Jimi's graphic into a sort of muddy olive color.
Chinese:
FCS (look at the blue detail around the output jack on both photos):
The Chinese factory apparently made their Tampo separations from a color print of the FCS item, and then attempted to color-correct. This explains the blurry, muddy "Hendrix Burning" label, which is actually printed under the varnish on the Chinese version"
The original 1997 FCS label (which emulates a backstage pass, contains the serial number of the guitar, and is actually pasted onto the finish):
See how crisp the lettering and photo are? Of course, Jimi's original Strat had no such label, and because of this, the label has taken a lot of criticism.
The FCS logo on the back of the headstock is laughable on the Chinese knockoff. It's got the edition number wrong (175; the correct number is 210) and some gibberish "DE2171", which I think is due to a blurry photo being the source of the copy. The silk-screening is way too heavy, as well:
The original FCS imprint:
One more thing (and really odd, since every vibrato tip I've seen from China is really close to the Fender item in shape): The vibrato tip is WAAAY off:
To be continued as time permits!