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Manufacturer: AxeGuardz
Country of Manufacture: USA
HOLE PATTERN
Over the years, Fender has used different numbers and placements of perimeter screws on Strat pickguards (click here for some images showing the differences):
| Acme's Terminology | Fender's Terminology | Fits These Guitars | # Perimeter Holes |
| Vintage 8-Hole | '57 Reissue | 1954 through mid-1959 | 8 |
| Vintage 11-Hole | '62 Reissue | Mid-1959 through mid-1964 | 11 |
| Modern 11-Hole | American Series | Mid-1964 to present; American Standard, Deluxe, etc; Mexican Standard | 11 |
TECHNOLOGY: SHIELDING
Shielding means to provide a barrier between electronic components and the environment at large. The barrier's purpose is to intercept stray electromagnetic and radio-frequency interference (EMI/RFI) and send it to ground, so that it doesn't get into your signal path and come through your amp in the form of hum. For best results, AxeGuardz uses two .012" aluminum skins separated by a layer of polyethylene. This patented process ensures that stray EMI and RFI doesn't get into your signal.
TORTOISE/MOTO PICKGUARDS
The top ply of these products is made of celluloid, and consequently it can be unstable. Solvents may be released from the top ply over time, which allows it to shrink slightly while the underlying plies remain dimensionally stable. The net result of this is that the material cups (like a very shallow bowl), so that when placed on a flat surface its edges may be raised 1/4" to 1/2" above the surface. If you're familiar with vintage Fender guitars then you've seen dimensionally-unstable pickguards - early '60s Strats will often have a crack or two in their pickguards that run from a perimeter screw hole out to the edge of the pickguard, for instance. And if you've ever looked at an old Jazzmaster with a tortoise pickguard and noticed that the wood screws are going in at angles rather than straight, this is the reason: The pickguard has shrunk, while the wood has not, so the screw holes no longer line up perfectly.
Even if the pickguard is cupped when it comes out of the package, it can be screwed flat onto the guitar (the perimeter screws will easily pull the edges of the cupped pickguard down to the body), but even with the perimeter of the pickguard held to the body, the pickguard as a whole will never lie quite as flat as a pickguard made from vinyl, or some other modern, dimensionally-stable material. This comes with the turf though, if you want the look then you have to put up with the shortcomings of the material.