Brief story here.
have a Hamer Slammer DA3 Strat clone. I bought it in 1998, brand new from Musicians Friend when they were having a sale at $99. It was my very first guitar...I learned on it. I bought it because the price was good and because it was black (I should've gotten the sunburst!)
Eventually it got out of shape, so to speak, and I basically neglected it in a corner of the house. In the meantime I bought a few more guitars, and eventually learned to set up guitars correctly...which then brought me up to the Slammer again. I set it up properly, and it has become quite a playable guitar.
What can I tell you about it now that I know a bit more about guitars?
Well, it's not a bad base for a modder's axe. Mine has a solid body (probably basswood), about 1/4" thinner than a regular Strat. The finish on mine is quite thin, and it's actually starting to "sink" into the wood (you can feel the woodgrain through it, and see it "reflected" when looking at it at an extreme angle). It's quite resonant, and light.
The neck is a bit thin for my tastes, and it has a faily flat profile. The neck is nicely finished in thin satin clear, and the rosewood fretboard has a smooth finish too. Something I came to appreciate much later was the excellent fret finish it has--no fret sprout, frets are sorta like jumbos, and the fretboard has nice rolled edges (although I'm not 100% sure if they came that way or it's caused by endless hours of playing!) The tuners are cheapy, but they hold their tuning well.
The original electronics were very, very crappy. When I resurrected it, I installed a cheap Saga pickup set I got for $10 and it actually improved the sound! I'm planning on getting a set of vintage-sounding low output pickups from GFS for it, along with decent pots.
The bridge isn't bad, but I blocked it with two cut-to-size blocks of solid wood; one behind the bridge block, and one to fit in the spring cavity. This tremolo won't move anymore! Hehehehe.
Since it was neglected for a few years (and even on a pawn shop once!), it has been naturally reliced (including the time it fell from about 5' and landed on an edge!)...So in a funny coincidence, it's very "in fashion" in the looks department...I changed the original pearloid guard and put in a tortoishell one, and looks pretty nice.
I've been playing it a lot lately...It has a very "soft" action (it has .009-042 Webstrings on it), and as I mentioned, it's very resonant and light...And I don't care if it gets dinged!
I wish I could publish some pics, but my digital cam died.
