And the origin of my guitar gets weirder....
Happened to come across the replacement control knobs page on the G&L website and see that the toggle switch knob that is on my body is the same as this:
The website says: KNOB - SELECTOR SWITCH - VINTAGE BARREL STYLE - TRIBUTE SERIES ASAT
"These are the vintage barrel style pickup selector knobs typically used on Tribute Series ASAT guitar models such as ASAT Classic that have a control plate. Will not fit USA models. Sold as single units. Picture may not represent actual product."
But my guitar is definitely not an ASAT... I did notice that the switch itself is very loose and appears that either the mounting holes on the switch are either stripped out or the bolts are too small or missing a nut maybe? Not sure if they are supposed to mount with a nut or just screw into the switch, there's no nut on mine and the thread hold the switch close to the pickguard (just won't hold it tight)... perhaps it's been replaced from another G&L guitar?
Then I also see in the Parts store on their website the listing for two different versions of the tremolo arm:
"Used on all US G&L Dual Fulcrum Vibratos from the late 1980s through approximately 2005. This arm is characterized by its raw machined satin finish with no chrome plating. Available in Right and Left hand versions.This arm will NOT fit current USA or Tribute Series models. "
OR THE OTHER VERSION: "This is the current push-in style vibrato arm to fit US models since the mid 2000s and all Tribute Series models with Dual Fulcrum vibrato. This arm is characterized by its chrome finish."
Mine appears to be the satin finish which would point back to a USA instrument. But then again the Japanese guitars seem to not exist in G&L literature and very little info is available on it online, so maybe they don't consider it part of the regular "Tribute Series"....
So to summarize about my mystery body:
IN FAVOR OF BEING USA MADE:
- 1998 manufactured date -- only non-USA series this year was intended for Japanese market, what are the odds of a Japanese market guitar ending up in small town USA? Of course
- English writing in the swimming pool route ("N RW PA LE6 TORT IWV")
- More english writing found on back of the rear cavity cover (can't remember what it said at the moment, it was three letters, will have to look again tonight)
- The chrome truss rod cover has "G&L" engraved in it (but not "Guitars by Leo" as I've seen elsewhere)
- Satin machined vibrato arm
IN FAVOR OF BEING TRIBUTE SERIES:
- Ping tuners on headstock (although it was a replacement neck -- I would assume though that whoever replaced the neck would probably use the same tuners that were on the old neck)
- Toggle switch knob that was supposedly only used on Tribute series ASATs (even though mine's not an ASAT?)
OTHER FACTS THAT DON'T REALLY POINT TO ONE OR THE OTHER BUT I'M POINTING OUT IN CASE THEY DO:
- Butterscotch blonde finish over what looks like a solid piece of Swamp Ash
- 2-1/4" heel cavity width (was the cavity depth the same between Japanese and USA models? Haven't measured that yet...)
- G&L pickup cover on bridge pickup
- My knobs don't push/pull (or at least they don't seem to)
This is obviously a Partscaster to some extent, so I guess it's not unfathomable that some of the hardware has been mixed and matched between somebody's USA and Tribute series guitars during the course of repair, but it just seems unlikely.
Was there any difference between the USA and Japanese model tremolo units? Maybe that would be the most damning evidence if there were...
Is there anybody in particular at G&L that I could contact that may be able to shed some light on it?
I know that some of you are probably thinking "Why do you care so much, stick a USA neck on it and call it a day" but I feel like behind every great guitar is a great story, I want to figure out what this thing truly is! Plus I don't want to run the risk of misleading somebody down the road if I were to ever resell it.