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Fender Drops MIM Standard Line


gardo

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It seems Fender has dropped the MIM Standard Series in favor of the Player Series . In addition they are adding the new Vintera series.. I like what I've seen on the Vintera except the price ' date='but hey I'm a cheapskate. What do you think ? https://shop.fender.com/en-US/electric-series/vintera/[/quote']

 

The Standard Series became the Players and the American Series became the Performer Series. Essentially they just renamed everything. The Vintera just basically a classic series made in Mexico.

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the name MIM has a bad reputation, not made in the u.s, cheap, blah.... and now with trumps wall aso its a logical step to drop this name and use something with less bias....

 

will that make better products? i doubt

will they be still be cheaper? i doubt too

 

but they will not close the factories in mexico, just by dropping the name....

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I agree this is little more than a marketing ploy...and price gouging. Let's face it, these are the same factories, same tooling, same machinery, same people making the same instruments...and charging more for them...but they will still have to say MiM on them somewhere....

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I thought of the MIM as a decent quality woking man's guitar and the Player as more of an entry level (not as good)

Now we're looking at $900 or more for a Vintera Telecaster,come on

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The Vintera just basically a classic series made in Mexico.

 

The Vintera series does replace the Classic series, but they're more than just renamed Classic series guitars - which were also made in Mexico, just like the Vintera series... but several features have been changed.

 

Here's a few, which I wrote down when I was on the press conference call announcing the Vintera series:

 

New colors.

New neck tints.

New vintage-correct neck shapes.

50s/60s/70s series models with era-specific pickups designed by Tim Shaw.

Vintage & Modified models (Modifieds replace Classic Player series)

Road-Worn is largely being removed, with only occasional road-worn runs in the future.

No lacquer models - all use poly for the bodies, urethane for the necks.

7.25" neck radius on all models.

Still no CuNiFe magnets on the re-designed WRHBs. :(

Pau Ferro is now standard on dark-fingerboard models instead of rosewood.

 

 

https://www.harmonycentral.com/news/fender-launches-new-vintera-series

 

 

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Phil. Do you know if the regulations on Rosewood have been relaxed or are they still enforcing them.

 

I don't think anything new has been added to the CITES regulations recently, but not too long ago (effective January of 2017) they made the documentation requirements stricter for rosewood and instruments containing it - but only when they are being shipped internationally. Some Fender models still use rosewood, but they're generally higher-priced, US-built models.

 

https://reverb.com/news/new-cites-regulations-for-all-rosewood-species

 

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  • 8 months later...
On 7/8/2019 at 9:17 PM, sammyreynolds01 said:

Phil. Do you know if the regulations on Rosewood have been relaxed or are they still enforcing them.

An update on that, since this thread has recently been bumped... rosewood musical instruments are now exempted, per CITES.

https://www.npr.org/2019/08/27/754509680/musical-instruments-to-be-exempt-from-restrictions-on-heavily-trafficked-rosewoo
https://www.gearnews.com/cites-rules-end-for-rosewood-in-musical-instruments-official-end-date-announced/

As I understand it, Indian Rosewood can still be difficult to source internationally, and there are still various regulations on it in different countries, so I suspect many new guitars will continue to use alternate woods - especially at the lower and middle price points. But the good news is, you don't have to have special permits or paperwork to travel with an instrument that contains rosewood... not that anyone's doing much in the way of touring or traveling at the moment, what with the quarantines and remain in place orders due to the coronavirus... 

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