So yeah, you need to brush up on some soldering, but it's not rocket science. I've used a cheap 25W Weller for years, and it's nice in that it doesn't get hot enough to let you overcook things. You'd need that kit they sell it in, with a little coil of solder, and maybe some tinning flux if you want it to go smoothly. Cheap money, and remember - money spent on tools is never wasted.
Following the diagrams isn't too hard. There aren't that many wires involved.
As for the spread of pickup makes, I would say the dimebucker and lace sensors may not make the best bedfellows. The thing is this... different pickups have not only a very VERY different tonal range, but different effective volumes. So take those up there, for example. In the bridge spot you've got a dimebucker, and then mid and neck are lace golds. The dimebucker is SUPER mid-rangey, and has little bottom end or really high highs. It's designed to sound like a dude yelling into a mic. It's supposed to support ludicrous amounts of distortion, to cut through. No subtelty, no finesse, no hope of cleaning it up and sounding ok, or of playing along well with others in a Position 4 setup on a strat with the mid pickup on too. It's just big-ass ceramic magnets. So it's really loud, and focuses on the midrange frequency set that doesn't have much competition in the mix. The lace golds, however, are much much softer, have deep low end and really nice sweet chimey highs. Why does it matter? Because you'll set your amp where it sounds decent for one set, and it will not sound as good or be at the right volume for the other pickups. And with those up there especially, I would have my amp set very VERY differently, tone and volume-wise. The laces need mids, but the dime is the opposite. You'd find yourself kinda stuck with one pickup selection. They'd just sound so totally different from each other, and not really in a good way.
If you want a setup like that, Hum-single-single, where it can handle a lot of distortion but still cleans up well, have a look at the duncan Pearly Gates humbucker (designed for Billy Gibbons, used a lot by Warren Haynes of gov't mule, came standard in the Lone Star Strat, fairly hotty totty but still sounds sweet when you back of the volume a little), paired with texas specials. Or the PRS McCarty humbucker for that classic old PAF sound and maybe some duckbuckers?
And finally, a tip I figured out that I wish I'd known sooner: You get your strings off, the pickguard taken off, and you *think* you wired it up right. The only way to check is to put it back together and put strings on and plug it in, right? Wrong. If you have ticking wrist watch, that is with a ticking (not sweeping) second hand, you can plug the disassembled guitar into an amp, turn up the volume on the guitar and amp, and then hold the watch right over the magnets. If they're wired right, it will come "CLOCK...CLOCK..CLOCK" ing through. Check it on a guitar you know works, but I've had several watches now that all worked like this.
_________________ [quote="Bloor"]He's either done too much and should stay out of the economy, done too little because unemployment isn't 0%, is a dumb ingrate who wasn't ready for the job or a brilliant mastermind who has taken over all aspects of our lives and is transforming us into a Stalinist style penal economy where Christian Whites are fed into meat grinders. Very confusing[/quote]
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