Bullet by Fender
The Fender Bullet was an electric guitar originally designed by John Page and was first introduced as a line of student-grade guitars
to replace the outgoing Mustangs and Musicmasters.
Fender marketed two original models made in the US - the Bullet Deluxe and a standard Bullet. The original version of the Fender Bullet
was based on the Telecaster but with cheap parts and lower quality, and originally sold for $199.00. It comprised a single cutaway
Telecaster-shaped body with a 21 fret rosewood neck and Telecaster-style headstock. The Bullet Deluxe had a plastic pickguard with
a separate, traditional hardtail bridge while the standard model featured a metal pickguard-bridge combo painted white or black,
with separate saddles for each string. Both models had 2 single coil pickups with a three-way selector switch. The pickups were
covered with a white or black plastic sheathing. The original Fender Bullet was only available in red (with a white or black pick
guard) and off-white (cream).
The next year, Fender introduced a second version of the Bullet, including two bass models. This version featured a double cutaway
Fender Stratocaster-shaped body with a smaller, maple neck. Headstocks retained the version one (Telecaster) profile. Five models
were marketed - the Bullet, Bullet Deluxe (S-2), S-3, H-1, and H-2, in addition to the two new bass models (a regular scale B-34 and
short scale B-30). The standard Bullet had the previous style metal pickguard-bridge combination with two single coils and three-way
switch. The Deluxe (S-2) had a plastic pickguard and separate hardtail bridge with the same pickup configuration. The new S-3 had a
separate plastic guard, traditional hardtail bridge, and three single coils with a five-way switch. The H-1 sported the metal
pickguard-bridge combination with one humbucker. It also had a coil tapping button. The H-2 had a plastic guard, traditional hardtail
bridge, and two humbuckers each with their own coil tapping button. The humbucking pickups were really two single coil pickups with
alnico rod magnets side-by-side. The basses each had plastic guards and traditional bridges. They had the old Mustang bass style
pickups. They differed only in scale. The second version Bullets were available in standard colors of red, cream, sunburst, or
translucent brown, as well as in custom colors.
From 1984 the Bullet has been manufactured in Japan and other countries and is marketed under the Squier trademark as the Squier Bullet.
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