Eben,
Here's his answer, along with a shot of the back:
"The guitar, while certainly Les Paul-esque in shape, is its own beast. A Fender neck will not even come close to working, but is similar in principle and essence.
"Regarding the neck: The guitar is 25.5 scale like Fender, but 24 fret. The heel end of the neck stops pretty much underneath the 23rd fret. There's enough extra wood on the fretboard beyond the 24th fret to cut a radius on it that looks like the 22-fret stratocasters, or you could do some other profile with it, like the curly brace end of the fingerboard on a Gibson L-5. The bridge is a strat hard-tail with string ferrules in the back, and mounting hole pattern uses a set of strat screws and strat style neck plate. The neck pocket is parallel to the top of the guitar, no angle. The neck proper has a little bit of a slot for the nut, and the fretboard is cut off flush at the backside of the nut. Plenty of gluing surface for some diluted white glue or some superglue to glue the nut in. I would have to check on the nut size, but it is a standard size blank. The neck is designed for a StewMac 0982 18 inch hotrod truss rod with the 1/8 hex head adjuster, and adjust at the headstock end. The neck slot is approx 1/4 wide and runs out the end of the headstock. The necks I have incorrectly stop short, so I will either need to rout it out the rest of the way, or swap with my source for a correctly slotted neck. While the headstock is intended for Fender 6-in-line tuners with the cast-integral alignment posts (which just drop in and tighten the hex nut). Some past participants have plugged the holes, veneered the headstock, and cut and drilled the headstock for 3x3 tuners.
"As for the body, there are three holes to mount a Les Paul type toggle switch, a master volume, and master tone. The holes are pre-drilled as part of the 3D design file, and I don't have any control over that (yet). It stands to reason one could drill two more holes to have two volumes and two tones, and a toggle switch to work like a Gibson ES guitar or Les Paul. But they'd all have to be located in that general area. The attached image is a cropped picture from the Purdue workshop, and you can see the rear cut-out area for the electronics. There's a kidney-bean shaped piece that covers the rear cavity. I don't have any of these yet.
"I like to think of this guitar as sort of a Les Paul Jr with a Fender bridge.
"Depending on the bridge, it may or may not fit. The top of the body is routed with a slight recess for the bridge and the pickups. I saw one guy last summer scrape and sand the top until the recesses were gone. Fender bridges and some of the 3rd party bridges have plates that are a little different footprint from each other. Usually the 3 mounting holes that screw the plate into the body are on the same spacing, it's the perimeter of the plate that can vary...Doug"
I put all this in because I don't understand it. I hope over the next few weeks and months(?) that I will learn it all and then some. I have the latest Musician's Friend catalog, so I'll look up Les Paul, Gibson ES, Gibson L-5, and 22-fret stratocasters.
Jim
"When people hear good music, it makes them homesick for something they never had and never will have." -- Edgar Watson Howe