I'll do a slightly abridged version, just because I've had lots of fuckups along the way. There is/will be more detailed stuff on my blog about it.
Apologies in advance for the shitty phone pics!
So yeah, I started out with a Peavey Raptor that's over 10 years old (maybe over 15 years old):


Stripped it and sanded all the paint off, revealing the guitar to be plywood:


Routed the neck cavity for a toaster, and recut the pickguard for HSS (with the neck being a toaster):


Painted the body satin green:

Then attacked it with a power sander:

Checked the pickups fit both the pickguard and the cavities (had to redo the neck cavity a bit for the toaster):


Started the long and arduous process of shielding the body with copper foil:

Applied vinyl to the pickguard, after testing on the backplate first, and drilled the necessary holes for the controls:



(yeah, I suck at applying vinyl but never mind it's only noticeable up close

So the next step is just to wire it all up, and fit everything together! I haven't got pictures of it, but I have also shielded the back of the pickguard.
In summary, I've taken a bog standard Peavey strat, and converted it to an HSS strat with a toaster in the neck, and a Seymour Duncan SH-14 in the bridge. The controls are just a volume (with a Mosrite style knob because fuckyea), and separate on/off switches for each pickup. The humbucker switch is to be wired as a three position on/off/on, which will be Humbucker --> Off --> South Coil. This way it'll be hum cancelling with the middle pickup.
Hopefully I haven't plastered so much copper foil that it ends up not giving any sound whatsoever

Also, I think if I did this again, I'd probably cut a new pickguard from black material. Applying vinyl to a pickguard is a friggin nightmare.
It won't be the prettiest guitar in the world, but I'm pleased with how it's going so far
