Professional guitarists in all musical genres have relied on the Fender®  Telecaster® guitar since its early 1950s introduction for its powerful  tone and smooth playability. The Standard Telecaster combines the best  of old and new, with hotter single-coil pickups, shielded body cavities,  medium jumbo frets, six-saddle strings-through-body bridge, cast/sealed  tuners, tinted neck, parchment pickguard and control knobs, and  ’70s-style headstock logo. 
The Telecaster is known for its ability to produce both bright, rich,  cutting tone or mellow, warm, bluesy tone depending on the selected  pickup, respectively "bridge" pickup or "neck" pickup. The bridge pickup  has more windings than the neck pickup hence producing much higher  output, which compensates for a lower amplitude of vibration of the  strings at bridge position. At the same time, a capacitor  is fitted between the slider of the volume control and the output,  allowing treble sounds to bleed through while the mid and lower ranges  are damped. A slanted bridge pickup enhances the guitar's treble tone. The solid  body allows the guitar to deliver a clean amplified version of the  strings' tone. This was an improvement on previous electric guitar  designs, whose hollow bodies made them prone to unwanted feedback. 
by Creston Electric
Why top-loader?
Many people insist that in  order for certain guitars to acheive proper snap, crackle, and pop, the  strings MUST pass through the bridge plate and anchor in ferrules on the  back of the guitar's body. Those people will argue this to the point of  violence. I suppose everybody has to believe in something. Those same  people are apt to work behind the counter at music stores. Here's what  they won't tell you:
4 of 5 string-through-body guitars you'll  find on the rack are STIFF and UNFRIENDLY. Those offending guitars are  also likely to be UNSTABLE when it comes to tuning. Some stiffness is  attributable to poor set-up, but some - unquestionably - has to do with  the tension on the string behind the saddle. My initial solution was to  move the bridge plate back, so that the saddles would come forward for  proper intonation and create a more gentle angle between the saddle and  the spot where the string dissappears into the body. It helped, but not  enough.
More often than not, I'm asked to build Bigsby-equipped  guitars. I began boring top-loader holes in my bridge plate flanges so  that, some unwarbly day in the future, players could remove their  Bigsbys and still have playable guitars without having to drill and  install ferrules. I was encouraged by a friend's particularly nice,  twangy toploader guitar, manufactured in California during the great  spare-parts year of 1959.
As soon as I tried one of those  modified bridge plates on a non-Bigsby guitar, I was sold. I have been  to the toploader mount and I have no seen the toploader light. Because  no part of the string is under especially heavy tension: the guitars  bend well, even at the country-friendly frets near the nut. They stay in  tune. Strings go unbroken. They sound every bit as good. Players often  report that they can use heavier-than-usual strings without losing  playability.
When the same toploader-hating music store guy is  A) rhaposodizing about anybody who ever played with John Mayall or B)  trying to sell you a $5000 guitar with inlay all over it, remind him  that only string-through-body guitars sound good.
I don't want to fight about it, but I'm standing up for toploaders.
Fender Standard Telecaster 1995-1996
Mint! Beautiful,  almost unused guitar in mint condition. It has a fixed  bridge and standard pickups.
There is a black and silver decal on the  peghead. White-Black-White 3 layer pickguard. Finish is just about perfect. B neck, 1 5/8" at the nut.  Everything works fine,switches, controls, etc.
Action is great. Sound is awesome. Ideal for great play and for a collection (15 year old guitar). 
Price: RM2,099