I contacted Fender who were very helpful. The one in the Wolfgang Special is apparently the 02000, which is exactly the same specification as the one made in Germany except that it's made in Korea.
I had four possible guitars selected that I will try at the weekend and with the different deals I can get, there is only £75 between the cheapest one and the most expensive.
Schecter Banshee
I've never played one of these before so it should be interesting. The headstock doesn't scream 'shred' but I think it still looks like a Metal guitar. The one in stock is Vintage Sunburst and unfortunately, I can't see my black/white zebra pickups really suiting that colour but if I like it, that wouldn't be a deal killer. I really know NOTHING about these guitars at all so if anyone can shed some light on them I'd be grateful. As I'd realistically have to sell my existing pups, the net cost of this guitar would be £525 so it would be the cheapest here, though I would probably end up buying new pups eventually, thus pushing the price back up.
Jackson DK2MQ Pro Series
The specification and look of this one is excellent. The main thing that puts me off is that it absolutely screams 'shred' and as I discovered when I sold my Soloist a couple of years ago, guitars with pointy headstocks are a pig to sell. It has a 4A quilted maple top, maple fretboard, decent Floyd, compound radius neck etc. There's no logical reason to knock this guitar and I feel silly saying the headstock puts me off but history suggests that the time will come when I sell this guitar and I suspect this will be the hardest one to shift and lose the most money. This one would come in at £575 and my existing pups would go in it beautifully, though if I did sell the pups this would then come down to £500.
EVH Wolfgang Special
I had a quick play on one of these last week and I'd like to try it again. It felt VERY solidly put together and surprisingly for me, I'd certainly not change the pickups as the stock items are superb. The neck is thicker than I expected but certainly not unpleasant to play and I love the Burnt Cherry Burst finish with the flame maple top, though I wish they offered a quilt option. I also like the fact that it doesn't look as obviously shreddy as the Jackson or Schecter, though it's not the prettiest guitar here and the headstock is fugly in my opinion and while the guitar sports a D-Tuna, it's not a feature I'm likely to use and the trem only goes down as it sits on the body. Even factoring in the sale of my existing pickups, this still comes in as the most expensive option here at £600. I love the build quality and the sound and the fact that it's not obviously shreddy but in terms of looks, I think it's a bit of a Marmite guitar and I'm unsure if I would find the restrictions on the Floyd a pain.
PRS SE Custom 24 Floyd
I feel a little stupid including this one as with the exception of the trem unit, this is EXACTLY the same as the one I just sold, even down to the colour. However, I know it's well built, I love the quilted finish, the Floyd is good and it's probably the least shreddy looking guitar here. It actually looks quite unassuming even with the Floyd. I would certainly put my existing pups in here as I don't like the stock items at all. Having said that, I would end up with a great guitar with great pickups and at £550 it's cheap. To end up with pickups of my choice, this is the cheapest guitar here so there really isn't a lot to find fault with. I would rather have a Maple fretboard or possibly ebony but being rosewood isn't a deal breaker and the only other thing I can think of is that this would be my third PRS SE CU24 so it feels a bit like I've already been there and done that but perhaps I keep coming back to them because they just suit me.
I really hope that something really stands out and grabs me on Saturday because at the moment, I have absolutely no idea at all which one would be best. As usual, experience and opinions would be welcome.