I wish they made the 60s Vintera ii in blonde and black like the Nocaster 😢 😭 I'm obsessed with that colour range but the 60s I believe only come in the blue or red. Such a shame
@@matt926uk1I think the only way you would hear the difference for yourself would be to have two of the same model guitars just with the different fretboard material, played through the same amp and settings. Personally, I have always found maple boards brighter sounding, but that's me.
As an owner of the American Vintage II 1963 Tele, I’ll admit this Vintera II 60s Tele is a great buy.
I have the AO60s tele and must agree
I could listen to Stoops play all day.
This guy suits these demos incredibly well. What great playing and such an informative demo.
Sonic Blue is my favorite Fender custom color!!
LOVE this playing.. sad i will never get that good 😢
Killer sound and playing mate!!!
Great demo and killer player.
Nice I wish they did one in black with white binding and rosewood
Excellent démo with great informations.
Own and love it.
He can really play
I wish they made the 60s Vintera ii in blonde and black like the Nocaster 😢 😭 I'm obsessed with that colour range but the 60s I believe only come in the blue or red. Such a shame
It’s a pretty guitar, was temped , but they all heavy.
So I am just going to partscaster one.
Have the body being painted now.
What are these pickups? Is this the set sold as Vintera 60's? Love Stoops! Killer player!
Is that the standard Fender 250 09 - 42 pickle plated strings?
How much time will it remain in the catalog?
what color is it ?
Sonic Blue
Orange
i'm pretty sure the neck wood isn't going to make any difference to the sound of the guitar lol
I am pretty sure it definitely does.
@@chippsterstephens6800 ok, can you show me some proof?
@@matt926uk1search for this Italian video: “febbre da chitarra acero palissandro”. Maple and rosewood are acero and palissandro in Italian.
@@matt926uk1but you can listen to differences also here (guitar center) comparing the 2 Vintera II 50 and 60. 50 is much more snappy.
@@matt926uk1I think the only way you would hear the difference for yourself would be to have two of the same model guitars just with the different fretboard material, played through the same amp and settings. Personally, I have always found maple boards brighter sounding, but that's me.