Latest squeeze
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
#122
I whipped the neck off the bass today, and used an old business card to make a shim to adjust the neck/body angle slightly - it's amazing the effect such a thin piece of card can have in improving the playability of an instrument.
Then a quick tweak of the truss rod with an allen key, et voila, a much nicer to play bass.
I also dropped the front pickup a bit, as I was finding that the strings were too easy to push into contact with the pickup pole pieces, causing an unpleasant "thunk" noise.
All in all it's been quite a fruitful process
Then a quick tweak of the truss rod with an allen key, et voila, a much nicer to play bass.
I also dropped the front pickup a bit, as I was finding that the strings were too easy to push into contact with the pickup pole pieces, causing an unpleasant "thunk" noise.
All in all it's been quite a fruitful process
Chris
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
#123
JB got a new bridge ...
It's a big improvement on the stock bridge.
The new bridge has improved the clarity, tone, punch, harmonics and sustain on the JB no end - well worth the outlay and mucking about factor.
And it does it all without chucking a heavy great lump of metal bits on the instrument, as the bridge is around the same weight as the original.
The gains have got to be down to the improved transmission of string vibration into the guitar body.
It's a big improvement on the stock bridge.
The new bridge has improved the clarity, tone, punch, harmonics and sustain on the JB no end - well worth the outlay and mucking about factor.
And it does it all without chucking a heavy great lump of metal bits on the instrument, as the bridge is around the same weight as the original.
The gains have got to be down to the improved transmission of string vibration into the guitar body.
Chris
- Dave the bass
- Amstrad Tower of Power
- Posts: 12276
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 4:36 pm
- Location: NW Kent, Darn Sarf innit.
#124
Ahhhhh! So thats what JB meant when he said "woaaahhhh....take it to da bridge!" Nice looking bit o' kit there Chris.
Bet its lighter than its old school equiv. There weren't a lot of options around 25 + yrs ago but this reckoned to be the best at the time so I've stuck with it.
And before you say it (Phil!), Yes, I really do have a Badass.
DTB
Bet its lighter than its old school equiv. There weren't a lot of options around 25 + yrs ago but this reckoned to be the best at the time so I've stuck with it.
And before you say it (Phil!), Yes, I really do have a Badass.
DTB
"The fat bourgeois and his doppelganger"
#125
Ah found it!, well maybe...
where did you get the bridge Chris?
I've had a problem with my Fender for a little while, one of the bridge saddles tends to wobble side to side. I was discussing with the bass a couple of months back and he suggested a badass but didn't get round to sorting it. I have to confess I don't play out much at the mo so it doesn't get the use it should, hence I've been a bit tardy fixing it.
yours looks like it might solve the problem. Does the front screw stop the saddle moving?
where did you get the bridge Chris?
I've had a problem with my Fender for a little while, one of the bridge saddles tends to wobble side to side. I was discussing with the bass a couple of months back and he suggested a badass but didn't get round to sorting it. I have to confess I don't play out much at the mo so it doesn't get the use it should, hence I've been a bit tardy fixing it.
yours looks like it might solve the problem. Does the front screw stop the saddle moving?
There's nowhere you can be that isn't where you're meant to be
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
#127
ahh
I was hoping you'd found somewhere cheaper than this:
http://www.thomann.de/gb/babicz_bass_br ... tAod90UA7A
I'm sure it's good value for money, I'm just an enormous skinflint at the moment.....
I was hoping you'd found somewhere cheaper than this:
http://www.thomann.de/gb/babicz_bass_br ... tAod90UA7A
I'm sure it's good value for money, I'm just an enormous skinflint at the moment.....
There's nowhere you can be that isn't where you're meant to be
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
#128
To be honest I think it's worth paying the £20 price difference, and at the moment there is one big thing to be said in favour of The Bass Centre, and that's that they have the bridges in stock.ed wrote:ahh
I was hoping you'd found somewhere cheaper than this:
http://www.thomann.de/gb/babicz_bass_br ... tAod90UA7A
I'm sure it's good value for money, I'm just an enormous skinflint at the moment.....
Chris
#129
I'm not sure I follow your reasoning there...surely it's exactly the same product, just £20 cheaper at Thomann????The Stratmangler wrote:
To be honest I think it's worth paying the £20 price difference, and at the moment there is one big thing to be said in favour of The Bass Centre, and that's that they have the bridges in stock.
There's nowhere you can be that isn't where you're meant to be
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
#131
They haven't got them in stock at the moment.ed wrote:I'm not sure I follow your reasoning there...surely it's exactly the same product, just £20 cheaper at Thomann????The Stratmangler wrote:
To be honest I think it's worth paying the £20 price difference, and at the moment there is one big thing to be said in favour of The Bass Centre, and that's that they have the bridges in stock.
This item has unfortunately sold out Babicz Bass Bridge Chrom (expected deilvery date: 21.12.2012 ).
Other customers who were interested thomann in this item bought the following similar products
Chris
#132
Well, lust got the better of me. The combination of it being my birthday last week (and a prime birthday at that), and spotting this 9 year old specimen on line in a shop up the road (Manchester), I now am looking after one of these
best learn to play it now.
best learn to play it now.
Whenever an honest man discovers that he's mistaken, he will either cease to be mistaken or he will cease to be honest.
- The Stratmangler
- Shed dweller
- Posts: 2892
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 1:50 pm
- Location: Rossendale, Lancashire
#134
Oh poo!
you really are showing off now Gorham!
It might be mine, give it back...if you look closely inside at the label it might still have my initials in it.
sassenfrassencursenfrassenclaudehopper......
edit: You've just reminded me..I had a 63 rivoli for some time which I sold in 1972ish for the princely sum of £70 to a shop in Stevenage......If I recall it was made on the same body as yours.....It was a pig to play(i've never liked short scale basses) but I bet it would be worth a mint now.
you really are showing off now Gorham!
It might be mine, give it back...if you look closely inside at the label it might still have my initials in it.
sassenfrassencursenfrassenclaudehopper......
edit: You've just reminded me..I had a 63 rivoli for some time which I sold in 1972ish for the princely sum of £70 to a shop in Stevenage......If I recall it was made on the same body as yours.....It was a pig to play(i've never liked short scale basses) but I bet it would be worth a mint now.
There's nowhere you can be that isn't where you're meant to be
#135
There has to be some reason for staying up till 1 every night building power supplies.you really are showing off now Gorham!
Whenever an honest man discovers that he's mistaken, he will either cease to be mistaken or he will cease to be honest.