In the description of a 1994 ASAT Special on his web site, Greg Gagliano makes this intriguing statement: "However, the BBE-made ASAT and ASAT Special had a different circuit from the pre-BBE ASAT. The BBE-era ASATs used the pre-BBE ASAT Classic circuit."
What constitutes that difference? The Broadcaster, and later the ASAT, has CTS 250k Audio Taper potentiometers, 200pF disk capacitor on the volume, and 6.8kΩ resistor with .100μF cap on the tone. The ASAT Special still has the 200pF disk capacitor on the volume, but the 6.8kΩ resistor has been removed and the cap now has a value of .022μF. Note that this is identical to the pre-BBE ASAT Classic wiring (as documented e.g. in my George's ASAT Classic Signature w/Leo Fender Fine-Tuner Vibrato post). (Note: the ASAT Classic model also had a 6.8kΩ resistor on the tone when it was introduced but it was quickly removed to improve the sound of that model.)
But when exactly did this change take place?
My mid-1989 flamed maple ASAT still has the Broadcaster wiring:


As expected, my late-1993 ASAT Special has the pre-BBE ASAT Classic wiring:


So with the 1989 still having the Broadcaster wiring and the 1993 ASAT Special the ASAT Classic wiring, I got intrigued by the aforementioned question.
Although Will Ray's first ASAT likely was assembled in 1992, it still uses a wiring harness with CTS pots dating back to 1990 (as do the date stamps) and does not have the resistor and the lower cap value.


What I call the ASAT Signature '500', an employee guitar from April 1991 does not have a resitor either:


In hopes of finally resolving it, I took possession yesterday of a beautiful 1991 ASAT Signature w/Dual-Fumcrum Vibrato from one of the members of the Michigan Mafia (as they were affectionately known on the old Forum). Given Greg's remark as when a transition might have happened, I had fully expected that it would still have the Broadcaster wiring. I was completely wrong:


This leads me to believe the transition to ASAT Classic wiring happened well before BBE took over G&L. I can totally understand it from a production standpoint where using the same wiring harness for both ASAT and ASAT Classic makes things a lot easier.
BTW, later on BBE changed that .022μF cap to .047μF, I think because the pups were wound hotter. At least, I find this value on my (pre-2002) ASAT Custom:


Would love to know whether anybody has additional information. Maybe you have a 1990 ASAT and want to take a peek underneath the control plate.
- Jos