
#1: ASAT Special, mahogany body.
Bought brand new from Thomann, currently they offer Tributes for very low prices so I just 'had to' jump. The setup was lacking (as expected) and the bridge needed a complete reinstall because it wasn't mounted flush (initially a bummer, but was easy to fix). After a 3 hrs. setup routine it's a perfect player now. Fit and finish were excellent from the start, neck pocket as tight as it gets, flawless fret job, perfect paint job on neck and body (3-piece mahogany). I did not know that there is no pool routing for the pups and was therefore impressed to see a solid block of center wood. Weight is reasonable, actually I thought it would've been heavier... nice. All I can say is wow! It's amazing how much of a quality guitar one can get for that little money. I'm really exited how it will fare on the amp compared to my boutique'ish ASAT Super which was about 5 times the price. Acoustic tone and playability feels to be on equal levels, though the Tribute neck is somewhat less beefy. The 9" radius feels just great, never played one before, heavy riffing is a lot of fun.
#2: S-500, swamp ash body (special edition).
eBay'ed this one for a good price. It's from 2012 and has the looks of the current models, albeit the body is swamp ash vs. mahogany. And it's a one-piece body which seems to be rather unique. Full setup for my preferred strings (11...56) is still due but again I'm amazed by the overall quality. I already have another, older S-500 Tribute which feels somewhat less refined than this one with a fret job not as good and less even sounding accross the fingerboard.
The neck carve is pretty much what I like, seems a bit wider and fatter than what's specified for Tribute necks (in direct comparison to the above ASAT it's quite noticable). The 12" radius helps troublefree bending even with very low action... which was possible because again the fret job is rather good.
Overall, I'm really impressed how good these Tribute guitars can actually be after the somewhat so-so expecience with the first S-500 (of course the excellent trem, pups and electronics made love the S-500 nonetheless).
Will try to make some hi-res shots... the finishes are really top-notch and would be adequate for any custom shop instrument.