
The USA-made Fender Highway One Stratocaster is situated between Fender’s American Standard and the Made-in-Mexico Standard series. The rejuvenated pickups and the associated Greasebucket tone controls breathe more modern life, giving what would have already been an extensive tonal pallet even more colours to play with.Ĭonstruction concerns aside, the big frets, thin nitro finish and no-nonsense approach make this guitar extremely alluring.From its classy satin finish to its beautiful C-shaped neck, the Fender Highway One Stratocaster is a guitar that we highly recommend to Strat lovers who want something just a little bit different. Many 'upgrades' dictate gold-plated hardware, fancy inlays and colours. Remember that the entire system remains passive yet, because Greasebucket doesn't overload the bass end and muffle the tone, it seems as if there's almost a mid-range hike.Ĭleanly all five settings sparkle like a frosty lawn, with positions two and four, although unavoidably quieter than the solo'd pickups, sounding both smooth and rich and showing why Strats are so much fun to begin with!Īside from purely aesthetic changes like the logo font, most of these Highway One upgrades are all about sound and performance, even the bigger Strat head is designed to add more mass. Performing a similar action with the neck pickup and employing tone control two, proceedings range from a nicely mellow yet vibrant sound to an almost classic Clapton-esque ooze.

Roll tone control one back to around seven and the edges of the sound round off to give an almost Gibson SG-style honk that's perfect for old school-style finger snaps and half-chords.

Fender highway one stratocaster cocoa full#
With tone one up full the bridge pickup, unsurprisingly, is brash, in your face and great fun to play with. There's little doubt that the influence of the Greasebucket circuit is best experienced with quite a fat overdrive tone - not unlike that of ZZ Top in effect. Time to opt for a Rivera Clubster 45 and set to work. SoundsĪ conundrum with reviewing such iconic guitars is exactly what to plug into, let alone what to play. This problem is certainly irritating and hopefully this is an isolated incident. The Strat's bridge is just off-centre sufficiently to stop you from being able to get the vibrato arm in place without using excessive force. Niggles? Well, there are a couple of shoddy points. The guitar features a single-piece neck of a lightly flecked maple and both come with a padded Fender Deluxe gigbag. The cast and sealed tuners are made by the far eastern Ping hardware factory. The vibrato block has been changed from zinc to more vintage-accurate steel and the string spacing at the bridge is slightly narrower - with the bigger frets and smoother playability, it's clear Fender didn't want us slipping off the edges.Įlsewhere everything remains within the ballparks that made the 1950s originals of these designs so compelling. The Strat's middle pickup is also reverse-wound with reverse polarity, so positions two and four on the five-way pickup selector should be devoid of hum pickup. The Strat's neck and bridge pickups (there's no tone control on the middle pickup) benefit from their own greased-up tone pots.Īny electricians among you will appreciate the information that each Greasebucket tone control wiring includes two ceramic disk capacitors alongside a 4.7k ohm metal film resistor. I actually named it myself after the can of used bacon grease that used to sit on our stove at home when I was a kid." So now you know! Replacing the vintage-style single-coils are what Fender describes as Hot Strat single-coils that are all based around an Alnico III magnet foundation, a mid-strength magnet that should provide a slightly enhanced, hotter performance when compared to an Alnico II.Īdditionally, the guitar offers Fender's increasingly popular Greasebucket tone circuit that was developed in the Custom Shop as a way of rolling off the high-end without the usual low-end woomph of a standard passive tone control circuit.ĭidn't this have something to do with a certain Billy Gibbons? "We designed with him in mind," states Fender's Mike Eldred, "and he was the testing guy. PickupsĮlectronically Fender has gone back to the drawing board too with the power of the guitar's pickups being increased.

So, this equates to a big headstock for the Strat (also providing more mass) with black outlined gold Fender logos, parchment pickguards and 22 enormo-frets for both. Neither Closet Classic nor brand new in the literal sense, a restrained vibrancy seems to be the order of the day as far as the look of both is concerned.Īnother notable change is with the overall livery, which has changed from a fifties-style to an unashamedly seventies feel.
