Interesting old thread here... developed a bit over the last few days. :lol:
I'll put my hand up and say I'm one of the folk that buys into "vintage".
Not real vintage, mind - I don't think any guitar is worth those sorts of prices to me. And this includes custom shop re-issue prices. If you all saved up to get me Rory Gallagher's actual strat for christmas, I'd be very happy, but I personally wouldn't fork out for one of the CS copies (or, at the moment, any of their products).
But I still buy into the "vintage" thing - here's my reasoning/motivation:
1. I'm buying into a dream - my perception of "rocknroll", "rock", "pop" from when I was growing up musically. For me, that happens to be late 60s and early to mid 70s music (with all their roots and influences thrown in). This kinda means I'm restricted to lusting after the "big few" (Fender, Gibson, Rick, Gretsch, etc), and also that almost all later brands/stuff leaves me cold. OK, it makes me a bit of a Luddite, but who cares? :D
2. I personally get on well with 7.25" radius on fingerboards. I like flatter ones as well, but a good 7.25 is a complete joy for me you can get it as low as I need it to go, it don't choke, I can bend like a b@stard on it, it sings, it chords, it blah, blah.. etc
3. I have to admit like the old folded metal saddles. I've no idea whether they sound better or not, I'm not even sure I care. They just look better to me (more "righteous" fitting my dream), and they feel better under my hand (it wouldn't feel like a strat to me if there wasn't a danger of ripping my hand open - this is from my experience of gigging years back er, a strangely misguided "rocknroll" theory of "No pain, no gain..." :lol:).
4. I also like a 6 screw floating trem, I don't want the 2 screw "look" even though I set a 6 screw up as 2 pivot "plus support". I don't use the trem on #1 by the way, I've got 5 springs in her and the thing is down flat, but I don't want it blocked, it doesn't need it, it won't budge. And I don't think I'd ever want a hardtail a) I like the extra jangle/noise, b) when I do want a trem (eg if I get another strat as good as this) I can set it floating again if I want and this one is really cooperative and stable tuning-wise...
5. On strats specifically, I like the smaller headstock. I kinda want "Fender" on it, but I gigged very happily with the early 80s "Squier Stratocaster" logo, a kind of hybrid old/modern look at the time...
6. Tuners: I love the slotted tuner design with the little oval buttons, I have no tuning problems with them and I love their tidiness. Anything else conflicts visually with my dream, and I've never found a need for locking or any other innovations. Also I can restring strats/teles with the "vintage" tuners much faster than my other guitars and they're usually ready to use immediately without too much "stretching time", not true for me on other types.
7. I loathe the extra fret on new Fenders I cannot tell you why, I just don't like the look.
I'm sure there's more but I'll stop listing them here...
I know it matters for some, but, for me, this doesn't mean a guitar has to be "vintage accurate" just for the sake of it. I don't care whether it is or not, I like specific features such as those above. For example, I couldn't give a monkey's about nitro or whatever, or the exact profile of the neck.
I hear what folks say about consistency of build quality across a brand being a good thing that modern stuff is giving us but as far as I can see, the "good" is that we've all got a better chance of picking a sweet one, it doesn't guarantee an individual guitar is gonna be the one (Might be wrong about this though, haven't thought about it a lot...). Also it seems the "vintage reissue" brands are benefitting from this improvement as well?
Basically it seems that there are "good ones" and "bad ones" across all price brackets and years. Hopefully, above the £2-3K mark, a "bad one" is actually "adequate" compared to a cheapy? I dunno, not really tried them, but I can't help feeling that £2-3K for what I find to be an "adequate" one would p1ss me off a bit...
I always play the thing, and try all the others available that day, if I can. If the thing looks good, feels good, rings out in the way I want it to, speaks to me, satisfies all or most of my preferences, and isn't out of my comfortable price bracket, then I want it.
My favourites at the moment are Fender Japan "re-issues" for what I want/need, I cannot beat 'em at that price. If I was going more expensive, I'd be talking to someone like Jonathan (for example, just cos I've met him and liked the work his guys have done for me) to make me "my" guitar that's another dream, I'm not even sure what it is yet, or how important it is to me, but I know it's slightly different than my main "middle-aged rocknroll" dream :lol:
So, concerning "vintage": I know they're doing it to me to make bucks, but I'm more than happy if marketing types come up with products I can afford that:
a) give me the features I want on my guitars
b) let me feel/pretend that I'm fulfilling my dream in some way.
Sorry it ended up as one of my essays! :D