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Thread: NGD and Focus 3000 Question

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Location
    Kennewick, WA.
    Posts
    33

    Default NGD and Focus 3000 Question

    I've been gassing for a white Squier CV 50s Strat for a while now and found one local to me on CL so I picked it up.
    Paid $250.00 for it, a HSC and a strap. Other than a little dust it is totally mint condition and the setup is just as I like it.

    I haven't taken any pictures yet but when I do I'll post then up.

    Now for the question about my F-3000.
    A few months ago I bought an Agile Dauntless which is pretty heavy at almost 10lbs. Tonight while moving the Dauntless and F-3000 around comparing their tone to the CV I noticed the Kramer seemed to weigh about as much as the Dauntless. Out of curiousity I weighed all three axes on a bathroom scale.
    The F-3000 weighs ~9.5lbs, almost as much as the Dauntless, the CV weighs between 6.5 - 7lbs.

    Is this an unusual weight for an F-3000?
    Does it indicate what wood the body might be made out of?

    Wheelman (Ken Wheeler)

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Wyoming
    Posts
    111

    Default

    Out of the species Kramer used, it's most likely made of maple. It's heavy and dense, much more so than poplar, basswood, or alder.
    Would you tell Picasso to sell his guitars?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Colorado Springs, Colorado
    Posts
    1,149

    Default

    I've never gotten my two F-3000s on the scales, but they're both very heavy guitars.
    "Mmmmm ... maple!"

    My Axes
    Trans Blue Maple F-3000
    Florescent Yellow Maple F-3000
    'Yo Focus

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    1,294

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Holzar88 View Post
    I've never gotten my two F-3000s on the scales, but they're both very heavy guitars.
    As is mine...notably heavier than my alder '86 1000 & 3000 (the '85 3000s I have are also alder, I believe, yet are heavier than the '86 ones but still not as heavy as my '87 trans blue F-3000 (which is, based on the Forum consensus from pics of the wood grain, made of ash). Of course none of them match the cement block that was my maple '85 Baretta Reissue.
    Go-to guitars:

    Red Yo 1984 w/chrome hardware
    Candy Red '86 Focus 3000 with '85 neck
    Candy Blue '85 Focus 3000
    Trans-Blue '87 F-3000 w/chrome hardware & SD Pearly Gates +
    Spalted Maple top BC Rich Mockingbird Exotic Classic w/SD JB & coil split added
    Blue Burst Epi LP Plus Top

    Great KF deals with: Phred, popvamp, mrwhipper, PacerPete, daveschare, bacon, zentropa, Full Crib (x2), and movnmik (Red Yo 1984 - FINALLY!!! WOO-HOO! )

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Dayton, OH
    Posts
    369

    Default ditto on this

    Quote Originally Posted by 0 Xero 0 View Post
    Out of the species Kramer used, it's most likely made of maple. It's heavy and dense, much more so than poplar, basswood, or alder.
    I have a project body from a Korean Striker 600ST and I have a Focus 3000 in tact. The Striker body will be used for mutt assembly and it is visually confirmed as 2-piece maple body. I'll finish it in some kind of burst pattern just to highlight the maple. (Cherry or Blue??) I think it is very possibly the same type of stock used in both countries.
    Attached Images Attached Images
    7 out of 5 statisticians suffer from lesdyxia.

    -Steve B.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Decatur, GA
    Posts
    430

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by kremark View Post
    I have a project body from a Korean Striker 600ST and I have a Focus 3000 in tact. The Striker body will be used for mutt assembly and it is visually confirmed as 2-piece maple body. I'll finish it in some kind of burst pattern just to highlight the maple. (Cherry or Blue??) I think it is very possibly the same type of stock used in both countries.
    That is a nice looking project body you have there, I would definitely like to see how your project turns out.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Location
    Kennewick, WA.
    Posts
    33

    Default

    Hmm, thats interesting, I thought all Strikers had plywood bodies, I guess I learned something new today.
    Sounds like my 3000 must have a maple body. I'm not sure of the exact year of manufacture but it was the late 80s.

    Wheelman (Ken Wheeler)
    Last edited by Wheelman; 06-04-2012 at 10:29 AM.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Dayton, OH
    Posts
    369

    Default

    It is generally assumed that Striker 100ST's and other low model #'s are plywood. Focus 1000's maybe too. I assumed my 600ST was plywood, but there was one way to find out.
    7 out of 5 statisticians suffer from lesdyxia.

    -Steve B.

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