Pabloguitarjazz
Seedling
- Joined
- May 20, 2026
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 1
- Name
- Paweł
- LOCATION
- Poland
Hello everyone,
I would like to kindly ask for help identifying the wood species used in my electric guitar body.
The guitar is a Japanese Fender Stratocaster ST62 made in 1989 at the Fujigen factory in Japan. Historically, these guitars were produced mainly using TWO TYPES of wood: ALDER and BASSWOOD. Unfortunately, because the guitar is nearly 40 years old and some electronic parts were replaced over the years, it is difficult to determine the exact original specification and therefore the exact body wood.
On guitar forums I received many contradictory opinions, so I decided to ask people who specialize in wood itself rather than guitars.
The attached photos show the “neck pocket,” which is one of the few places on this type of guitar where unfinished raw wood can be seen clearly. After comparing many examples online, I personally began to suspect that the body may be alder rather than basswood.
My reasoning is mainly based on:
- the darker salmon/pinkish coloration that developed with age,
- visible darker grain/fiber lines in some areas,
- and the overall structure of the wood.
- I also tried the fingernail hardness test using a lot of force directly on the raw wood, and it did not leave even the smallest mark or scratch at all — absolutely zero trace.
From what I have learned so far, older basswood often tends to remain much paler, cream/yellowish, softer-looking, and visually more uniform, while alder can develop warmer reddish or salmon tones over time. At the same time, I also understand that some examples of both woods can appear visually very similar, especially after decades of aging.
This is a wonderful old instrument and I am simply trying to learn as much truth about it as possible. I would be extremely grateful for any opinions from people experienced in wood identification, restoration, woodworking, or wood science.
thank you very much for your time


Thank you very much for your time and help.
I would like to kindly ask for help identifying the wood species used in my electric guitar body.
The guitar is a Japanese Fender Stratocaster ST62 made in 1989 at the Fujigen factory in Japan. Historically, these guitars were produced mainly using TWO TYPES of wood: ALDER and BASSWOOD. Unfortunately, because the guitar is nearly 40 years old and some electronic parts were replaced over the years, it is difficult to determine the exact original specification and therefore the exact body wood.
On guitar forums I received many contradictory opinions, so I decided to ask people who specialize in wood itself rather than guitars.
The attached photos show the “neck pocket,” which is one of the few places on this type of guitar where unfinished raw wood can be seen clearly. After comparing many examples online, I personally began to suspect that the body may be alder rather than basswood.
My reasoning is mainly based on:
- the darker salmon/pinkish coloration that developed with age,
- visible darker grain/fiber lines in some areas,
- and the overall structure of the wood.
- I also tried the fingernail hardness test using a lot of force directly on the raw wood, and it did not leave even the smallest mark or scratch at all — absolutely zero trace.
From what I have learned so far, older basswood often tends to remain much paler, cream/yellowish, softer-looking, and visually more uniform, while alder can develop warmer reddish or salmon tones over time. At the same time, I also understand that some examples of both woods can appear visually very similar, especially after decades of aging.
This is a wonderful old instrument and I am simply trying to learn as much truth about it as possible. I would be extremely grateful for any opinions from people experienced in wood identification, restoration, woodworking, or wood science.
thank you very much for your time


Thank you very much for your time and help.




