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25.5" scale length except model 27-5500 which has a 24.75" scale length. ... The early Fender Japan Contemporary series serial numbers from 1984 to 1987 follow the ...
This version of the Aerodyne Jazz is similar to the other Japan non-export models, except that it has two (DiMarzio-designed, but manufactured in Japan) J-style pickups instead of a stock P/J pickup configuration. It also has a medium 32"-scale length (812,8 mm) which plays just like a regular Jazz Bass with a capo at the first fret.
Fender Contemporary Stratocaster Japan, one of several Fender attempts on superstrat market. Fender responded to the superstrat fashion in the mid-1980s, producing a number of models based on the standard Stratocaster. Fender Contemporary Stratocaster Japan (1984–1987) Fender Performer (1985–1986) Fender HM Strat (1988–1992)
The collaboration began in 1982 and ended on March 31, 2015, with Fender's launch of Fender Music Corporation (Japan) taking over the Japanese business effective April 1, 2015 with a Fender-manufactured product line. The Japanese-made Fender guitars sold by Fender Music Corporation (Japan) have since been categorized as the "Japan Exclusive ...
All-Pro Basketball, known as Zenbei!! Pro Basketball in Japan , is a basketball video-game developed by Aicom and published by Vic Tokai for the Nintendo Entertainment System . It is played using two teams of five players on a full-length basketball court, and a roster of eight different fictional teams.
The Lyte comes in 6 different colors and finishes. Basswood is used for the body, and maple is used for the neck, although this varies depending on the year of production and place. From 1982 to 1996, some necks for Fender Japan Guitars were made by Atlansia. The fittings are die-cast gold, and the pickups are covered by a plastic sheath.
At the time, sale prices for the high-end Talon V guitar were listed at US$1169.99. [3] The lack of sales was compounded by the failing value of the Japanese yen in the early 1990s compared to the US Dollar. Add to this the overall decline in popularity of superstrat guitars through the early 1990s, as non-metal genres such as grunge and ...
The Fender Performer Bass was designed by John Page to be an evolution version of the Fender Jazz Bass. [1] The Performer Standard was manufactured by FujiGen in Japan in 1986, at a time when Fender was just completing moving United States production from Fullerton (which had been through terrible quality control issues) to Corona. [5]