I've never liked nor agreed with the term Strat killer for Silo Specials or AL's.
Very well put. Although I did play a Lone Strat strat yesterday that was wicked cool and sounded great.I have to agree with this. Having played both quite extensively, I'll have to say that both are great, and both are mutually exclusive. Though I've found the Silo Spec to be a better HSS guitar than a HSS strat, while a Strat makes a nicer SSS guitar. I dunno what it is... But somehow, The Strat rules at what it's originaly meant to be: an SSS guitar. Nothing else will deliver what it does. The Silo spec, with the cool wiring that EBMM incorporates, is a killer HSS guitar. Beats any other HSS guitar I've played out there... yes, including some of the "boutique" names.
Man I really enjoyed that. It didn't help me though. I have gone through all kinds of remorses about my Morse. I honestly thing the Silo Spec HSS would suit me best.....
Very well put. Although I did play a Lone Strat strat yesterday that was wicked cool and sounded great.
The Silo Spec in SSS format sounds "airy", smoother, and more resonant than your standard strat, while a strat in that config sounds more toppy and trebly with more mid bite to the tone. Not better or worse... just different. Obviously I tend to prefer the Silo Spec because I find it easier to adapt to multiple styles in its stock form, and I can just maneuver and get my tone on a Silo Spec way more easly than a stock strat.
I think a Strat will always excel at those SRV type tones people love so much, although a Silo Spec loaded with Texas Specials would be killer!
I think the best "Strat Killer" that can be bought these days for a reasonable sum is probably the G&L Legacy or the S-500. Those guitars are what Fenders should be now.
Man I really enjoyed that. It didn't help me though. I have gone through all kinds of remorses about my Morse. I honestly thing the Silo Spec HSS would suit me best.....
Is it really like this? Take two strats and you get three different kind of sounds. There are so much pickup-sets, woods, guitar builders etc on the market, so can you really define that typical strat tone? I don´t think so. Even in Fenders shop you can get a lot of different strat-types, you cannot say, this is the strat sound.
hmmm, sounds like he likes the black 25th?![]()