I asked a fellow guitar enthusiast (read more collector than player) what his favorite brand of guitar was in his collection and was surprised to hear that his most prized to play was a Schecter. I had never owned one and didn't know much about them. I did a lot of research and decided that I would give them a more than fair trial. I paid a pretty penny for this model because it had premium pickups and nice embellishments like a Wenge wood neck. There is a later edition that has a more traditional flat shape and skips the Wenge wood neck, but I kept searching until I got the one I wanted. I then had to buy a generic case until I could get a genuine Schecter case for it. It is a beautiful instrument that is solid as a rock and performs flawlessly. There are only three issues for me personally: I play acoustics now almost exclusively, I am used to (and like) a wider neck at the nut, and I am more inclined to semi-hollow body electrics. So I have "thinned the herd" of what I own down to the bare bones in my old age and feel this guitar would benefit someone else much more than me. It is in perfect condition and has a matched (fairly expensive) case to live in and is a great guitar. If you are like my buddy and favor the Schecter brand, this is a real opportunity IMHO. Let me know...
There are several videos of Aaron Marshall putting this guitar through its paces online if you want to hear some samples. Here are some specifications:
Double-cutaway basswood body
Bolt-on quartersawn wenge neck in a thin C-shaped profile
Macassar ebony fingerboard with 24 extra-jumbo stainless steel frets
Schecter Solstice humbucker at the bridge and Equinox humbucker at the neck
Locking tuners and aluminum offset reverse circle inlays