Squire teles
I have a walnut stain Squire tele standard that is an awesome tele. I have several Peavey Generation X teles that are equally astounding.
My Squire standard is undergoing some minor modding: I put in a Fender Custom Shop Texas Special bridge pickup 10.5k output, after I noticed a set of new replacement Squire pickups on MF for 15 dollars. I said, holy ^&*^, these must be some really GREAT pickups for a whole fifteen dollars. Hence I found a bridge excellent Texas Special for thirty five dollars from a guy I replace the pickup in his Fender with a GFS 'lil Puncher. Now I'm getting a neck Texas Special for it.
I played the butterscotch affinity tele at GC and was totally amazed by the tone. Sounded as good as the Fenders. Excellent build quality. I want one. Only 169 dollars, new. Maple fretboard. Throw some great pickups in that and some American electronics and it would be really a nice guitar.
I picked up a used Squire affinity strat for twenty five dollars and hot rodded it into an expensive guitar, comparitively speaking, something I won't part with. It's called "Black Pearl", has a black oyster shell pickguard and black Seymour Duncan pickups - a bridge hot rails in the neck, a bridge '59 in the middle and a JB Jr in the bridge, all American electronics, Fender locking tuners, black body and black controls. The sound is incredible, as you might guess. It is thin and light and of excellent quality. The neck is flammed maple every quarter inch from the bottom to the top of the headstock, horizontally. One beautiful naturally reliced guitar that has been around the world with missionaries and came to me in poor shape with no tone controls, wide open with just a volume control. I immediately hot rodded it and am glad I did. It is probably one of my best sounding and built guitars and I have some expensive ones.
There is just something about hot rodding your own guitar. It gives it an intrinsic value that is priceless and if it sounds super great you know you did your job well. I would say, don't skimp on the pickups. They are the main source of the guitars sound. I use GFS but definitely prefer Seymour Duncan for the premium price. I use GFS though in some applications.
Good luck. Hope it works out.
Duffy
Winfield, Pa.