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Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/05/19 in Posts

  1. [i can just hear the scrabbling of those bassists expressing an interest forming what they consider is an orderly queue]...
    6 points
  2. I am a bass tart. I will go with any pretty bass. There, I said it. I saw this and I had to try it. It was made in Finland by a guy who seems to build one off basses when he fancies it. It has a Carbon fibre neck, some lovely, lovely wood on the body, a Wal-alike pickup, an ACG/East filter preamp and a Piezo bridge. It is very light and is someone's bass for life. I wanted it to be mine but it was not to be. Buying it has just confirmed for me that I like 33" scale basses with two magnetic pickups. I could route this for another pickup. If I was monumentaly stupid. So I wont. There is nothing wrong with it. It is just not my flavour. I went to the bassbash last weekend and tried a gazillion basses and just came to the conclusion that for now 33" and 2 magnetic pickups is where it is at for me so no matter how much I want to posses this bass I will always pick other ones up first. I cannot keep things just cos they are nice. Price is firm and fully insured shipping will be added. I do not NEED to sell it so will enjoy it while it is here. I am not open to offers or trades. You will never see another of these. Mr MPU never seems to repeat himself. If this combination of spec floats your boat then this will REALLY float your boat. It is lovely, lovely, lovely.
    4 points
  3. I have @Pea Turgh‘s other kidney to sell for mine. Thanks.
    4 points
  4. Seem to be a handful I often pull off the shelf... The Cult "Dreamtime" Joy Division "Closer" All About Eve debut album Fields Of The Nephilim "The Nephilim" (specifically side 2 for those who can remember when a disc had tunes on both sides :-) )
    4 points
  5. I certainly fall into the category of "I've paid £1700 for a bass, I shouldn't have to spend more replacing pick ups" it's taken me years to come to this decision after almost selling it several times... Thing is, it's so light, plays like a dream, and every time I look at it I get all warm and fuzzy 😍
    3 points
  6. On the 'not a lot' subject, I hot-desked for a subcontractor at a very well know Chinese telecoms business and one of the Chinese girlies I used to deal with said she would expect to be paid £250 a month tops there for a job she was being paid six or seven times more for over here. The company regularly rotates staff back to China, so I asked her one time what she would do when she went back, she just said, 'Oh, I won't go back, I'll just run.' Thing is, cost of living is quite comparative to what they get paid - I'm not being at all flippant here, but certainly out 'in the country', where she was from, £250 (or the equivalent) goes an awful lot further than £1,500 would here.
    3 points
  7. Selling this beautiful Human Base Max 5 headless in translucent blue. I bought this bass for touring with lots of flying. Used it on 2 big tours with 30+ flights and it was so much easier than ever before: The bass fits in a regular guitar gigbag and can thus easily be stored in every hand luggage. The sound is very clear, focussed and with a massive low-end. Played this bass from very small to very big stages, engineers loved it… Human Base - Max 5-string - Headless-Design: works with normal strings, no double-ball-ends or other special strings neccessary - maple body - maple top - maple neck (3 piece, neck-through) - ebony-fretboard - Delano-Pickups - Glockenklang 3-Band-EQ with active/ passive (push-pull) and passive toneblend (in passive mode) - 4,2kg - built in 2010 - 2 Switches: not 100% sure, I believe it changes the wiring of the pickups between serial, parallel and single (it certainly does something like that, but not particularly sure about the technical details. however: this feature provides a bunch of tonal options from "huge fat humbucker" and crispy single-coil. The bass is in very good conditions. A few little marks of use, please check the pictures. They give a good impression of the instrument. BASS IS SOLD!! Bass is located in Germany, near Bonn / Cologne.
    3 points
  8. 3 points
  9. Bought this with the intention to defret it as the piezo and Equis preamp are excellent plus XLR and jack for recording. Incoming Godin A4 means I’m moving it on. Very cool looking bass in great condition, price includes postage in the UK in fitted Black Rat hard case, also in great nick On-Board Electronics with 4 Band EQ The Washburn AB10 electro-acoustic bass comes fitted with an on-board Equis Crystal active preamp. A high-quality preamp with very low noise making the AB-10 a great acoustic bass for studio recording as well as a live performance bass. In addition to the standard jack socket, the AB-10 electro-acoustic bass also features a balanced XLR out so you’ve got more options when connecting to a mixer or audio interface. A piezo bridge pickup is used for precise reproduction of your playing. Integrated 4-band EQ allows you to adjust your tone until you find exactly the sound you want. You can also control volume and phase for added customisability over your output. Great Build For comfort during playing and easy transport, the Washburn AB-10 has a slim, shallow body yet still produces lovely, deep bass frequencies. The AB10’s top is made of spruce while the back and sides are mahogany with quarter sawn, scalloped sitka spruce bracing. The body features a cutaway design to make accessing the higher frets easier; great for solos, lead-bass playing and more melodious bass runs. The 34” scale neck is made of mahogany with a rosewood fretboard holding 23 frets. A 40mm ABS nut, rosewood bridge and Grover Exclusive tuners complete the hardware. Serious Bass Performance at a Great Price If you want people to know you’re serious about your amplified acoustic bass tone, you’ll play Washburn. An extremely playable, thin-bodied, cutaway favourite with Washburn’s own Equis Crystal preamp offering professional bass tone that won’t break the bank. Thin bodied acoustic bass Florentine cutaway style Select spruce top Mahogany back, sides and neck 40mm ABS nut Rosewood fingerboard Rosewood bridge Piezo bridge pickup Equis Crystal active preamp Volume, phase and 4-band EQ controls Jack and balanced XLR outputs Chrome die cast Grover Exclusive tuners Fitted with D’addario EPBB170 phosphor bronze strings
    2 points
  10. Price: £175 Trades welcome. Fantastic little basses from the 90's era of Yamaha, around the time of Mr Sheehan's first signature bass and around the end of the Attitude series. Well, other than the £3000 Billy Sheehan signature at least. A little research and these tend to sell in the region of £280-350 in good condition. However, despite doing well for its age and not a common bass to find around, it could do with some TLC in the form of some new electronics as the tone pot/capacitor is duff by a previous owner (£20 set on eBay) and has some wear on the neck. This is reflected in the price considerably. Nice little project for the right person to have a groovy little bass to love. Trades welcome, offers aren't. Collection preferred but can post at buyers expense. Any questions, fire away 😁 book included 😉👍🏻
    2 points
  11. Absolutely beautiful unlined stingray, with original Musicman hard case, some tiny marks on the board from roundwound strings in a previous ownership, bass is currently wearing D'addario chrome flats. custom pickguard from Myrtle burl is fitted and original black pickguard is included, i have my eye on something else, So cash or a boutique 5 string single cut with a cash adjustment from my end.
    2 points
  12. I could come for it on Saturday rather than see it skipped! But as I have Nottingham Thursday, and Doncaster Friday and Sunday if @mr4stringz wants it can get it, let him have it! My concern is first that it has a good home!
    2 points
  13. I think you're right Al. Even the basses i have that i had given up on and was thinking of changing pick ups and pre-amps now sound pretty good. Even better since i added the Orange OBC115 cab to it. Lovely smooth low end and clear low to mid punch but its a lot to humph about at my ripe old age. I'll need to try the VM4 thru my GK1001RBii and Berg HT322 see what a nice clean sounding amp makes of it. Might try that tomorrow as i've now made myself quite curious. The Mpulse head thru the Berg HT322 cab sounds amazing too. Nice and clean but still keeping that warm tubiness sound. The Sandbergs aren't for everyone but that's the same for any bass on the market. You just need to find the one that suits what you like and what you do. At the moment i've hit it lucky and it suits what i'm doing at the moment. Few yrs back and the VM4 just wouldn't have been for me but i'm older now I still love playing my trusty old Geddy Jazz tho 👍 Dave
    2 points
  14. I’ve not long ago bought a custom and I too get a very comfortable feeling when I pick it up and play, and I like the sound of mine, but if I didn’t I’d have no problem whatsoever doing what you’re doing, for me it’s all about being happy with my instrument, not making a profit on it 🙂
    2 points
  15. Again that pre amp and pick ups are ‘stock’ but also ‘stock’ are Sandberg own and Sandberg Black label at no extra cost, Haüssel’s are a small up charge, Darkglass Tone capsule is a recent ‘stock’ and of course you can go passive and not pay for a bass pre-amp at all. The single hang up on a bass seems to be the single most easy thing to change and actually one that never needed be a hang up at all. Of course sometimes it takes using a a piece of equipment to find out what works, but actually if you think about it - sell a bass at approx £800 loss, or after selling the pick ups and pre-amp etc and buying new ones spend in total another £1-200 - then it becomes a no brainer if everything else on the bass rocks.
    2 points
  16. Well it landed 🙂 Stone me this thing is glorious as glorious gets. My main 2 doubts with getting one lay in the volume and mid's I could get out of it( I like mid's ,and volume)....... As others have said,I need not have worried, very loud,crisp, punchy with globs of mids .can't get over how light it is for a solid state iron head.the quality of build certainly shines here. Look forward to testing it in the mix. Thanks for shedding some light on Handbox amps wateroftyne 🙂 would never have one otherwise. Very happy bunny.
    2 points
  17. I think a lot of these “ thoughts” are not particularly based on fact, more on hunches/half truths/ancient wisdom etc. If you all have a reasonably accurate tuner, the differences between tuners will be smaller than the inaccuracy of the operators themselves.
    2 points
  18. Mick repayed a favour I did (ages ago) for him whereby he collected a bass from a ‘collect only’ seller near him and shipped to me. couldn't have done a better job. Lovely man. Thank you x
    2 points
  19. Apologies @Horizontalste for pulling this over from another (Accessories) thread, but OMG I totally love what you've done to your 425!!! Wow!
    2 points
  20. I have an RCF 732A (broadly equivalent to QSC K12.2) and I've used both mic and line level settings when gigging. Mic level is louder but makes my pre-amp volume control more sensitive (a smaller tweak results in a larger difference in volume). So I generally use line level unless I need to be really loud. Just start with the pre-amp volume low to avoid any surprises. But in general, you're not going to blow out a QSC. Certainly at close quarters your ears will give out before the speaker does!
    2 points
  21. That montage is hardly 'merciless slaying'. You say 'it sounds like Rickenbackers are pretty good instruments...'. I take it from that statement you haven't owned or played one? John Hall's doing a 'pretty good job of running his company'? That's debatable and belongs in a whole other thread. JH does get a hard time from Rick users and non-users alike. In my experience, it is wholly deserved. Let me offer you a few reasons why. Back in the early 2000's I bought an old, stripped '74 4001, my first since the two I'd had in the '80s. Both of those basses were 'dogs', as it is sometimes said, but with my interest in the model re-ignited I decided to give them another bash. The '74 had some issues (NOS hairpin rods needed) but I was happy with it. Then came a '73 in Fireglo with cheq. That was a really good bass. Then came a 4001LF and a 4003 BlueBoy. And with that latter purchase, things got interesting. I also got to encounter the real John Hall. I had been a member of the official Rick forum back then and noticed that a few guys who'd bought the BB were having colour issues, such as the blue fading to a mint green. Mine did this within a matter of months and whilst I quite liked it I was alarmed that a finish should be changing so soon in an instrument's life. Then, I began to see nicotine-like streaks/splotches appear in the finish, as did others. We questioned this on the forum and then JH waded in. As soon as there was any form of criticism - even warranted - of his company, his business practice, his instruments, he would go for you. And he went for me. I was hectored at length about how the finish could not have possibly changed in such a short time; that I must be leaving the bass in a smoke-filled environment; that I was exposing it to UV light; that chemicals in my skin were causing the changes. So, he went on the attack right away. Throughout the years I have witnessed him come out on the attack time and time again: it is your fault, not mine! Now, doesn't that make him sound like a little bully? And when you get personally attacked by JH via e-mail you know that you are dealing with an unreasonable man. He would wade into conversations with such burgeoning rudeness that I often wondered if the man had a mental health condition for he seemed unable to address anyone who had a grievance, or difference of opinion, civilly. You really had to sit back and think 'Is this guy the head of RIC? Wow!!' You could search RIC Forum (and the cabal of acolytes, RRF) over the past 15-20 years for the stuff he's waded in on. And I'm not even going to start on the pursuing of 'fakers made 40+ years ago. There's a wealth of information out there about the man; it's up to you if you want to look for it and learn a little bit what he's like.
    2 points
  22. Public Image Ltd - Metal Box Crass - Feeding The 5,000 / Stations of the Crass Simple Minds - Empires and Dance Human League - Reproduction / Travelogue John Foxx - Metamatic Killing Joke - what’s THIS for? / Revelations Siouxsie and the Banshees - Juju Japan - Gentlemen Take Polaroids / Tin Drum Þeyr - As Above... Kraftwerk - The Man Machine
    2 points
  23. @Manton Customs had a bright red tiny bass at the Midlands Bass Bash on Saturday. If I remember correctly it was more of a demonstration piece than a new product line, but you could contact them and ask if they would make to order. There is a photo of me playing it rather badly on the forum for that event. The guitar sound is lovely, but I personally struggled with the small size 😞
    2 points
  24. Are the Zoom B1/X-4 & Zoom B3N multi-fx 'good enough' for live use? (Or should I stick with / step up to a Helix Stomp?) "The Zoom workflow and simplicity is just what the doctor ordered...preference to play my instrument more and menu-dive less." "the more sophisticated modelling multi-fx are capable of certain routing configurations and real-time (and/or automated) control of individual/multiple parameters...boxes like the HX Stomp and HX Effects are truly marvellous at their price point" I got asked by a mate earlier why I was moving my Helix Stomp on? My sense is this little B1X-4 is going to be sufficiently on point for live use that I can use it in place of my Helix Stomp. I love the fact that it's so user friendly. The Stomp is undoubtedly the 'better' / more sophisticated piece of kit, but I really think this will be plenty good enough in the mix with my bands and I'll be surprised if anyone in the audience will notice any significant difference on most of the usual classic effects - and that's the litmus test for me. @jimfist who has far more experience of multis than me was coincidentally arriving at the very same decision to move his Stomp on and his reasons are very much what I was feeling, but just a lot better articulated! This is what he had to say (over on TB): “Essentially the same modelling set, but I've come to the same conclusion with my B3n, and I'm prepping my HX Stomp to go off for sale to someone who'll use it more effectively than I will. I've dedicated hundreds upon hundreds of hours programming multi-fx modellers over the years and have grown fatigued of the process. The Zoom workflow and simplicity is just what the doctor ordered. It's not a knock on the more sophisticated pieces of gear (of which I've owned many), but more a knock on the work flow and preference to play my instrument more and menu-dive less (let alone having to be tied to a computer for more robust editing). That the Zoom box(es) get the job done is all that matters, even though the "big boy" modellers are so much more capable. The audience I cater to now would sooner notice 10% better musicianship than they ever would care about a 20% subjective improvement in tone, especially when that "great tone" can be totally screwed a dozen different ways in a live performance situation (a great equalizer). I geeked out on the Fractal AxeFx for years. Then on a whim I got the old B3 and used it for a couple of gigs. Nobody noticed or cared. That's when I started re-thinking my priorities...taboo on a gear forum!! The big caveat here is that the more sophisticated modelling multi-fx are capable of certain routing configurations and real-time (and/or automated) control of individual/multiple parameters, which the current Zoom boxes aren't able to do. If your needs are simple, then no worries. Otherwise, the more specific and sophisticated your needs, the more likely you'll find the "big boy" modellers more attractive and necessary. In that respect, boxes like the HX Stomp and HX Effects are truly marvellous at their price point. Still, there's no denying the value you get from the inexpensive Zoom boxes, limited though they may be.” Perfectly put. Thank you Jim.
    2 points
  25. a) good luck with that. b) there is a rapidly increasing queue!
    2 points
  26. Bit the bullet on my Sandberg and have local pick up makers Ghost pick ups making me a PJ pick up set to replace the Delano's. Hes also going to remove the glock and add a new passive only circuit. Exciting times indeed!
    2 points
  27. Hi, attached a few pictures of the work in progress on the final design of my EVO-FX5 bass
    2 points
  28. Some Joe Dart inspiration 🙌🏻
    2 points
  29. Entitled "20 Iconic Bass Guitars", I'm thinking of making this available to BC members as a print in either A3 or A2 sizes providing I get enough interest... This image you're looking at is printed on bog standard A4 and really need to be seen in a bigger format, but you probably get the idea. Any criticism welcome...
    1 point
  30. Price drop £1850 Up for sale is this beautiful Modulus Quantum 6 String Bass. It is in absolute mint/new condition as if it came directly from the factory with original hardshell case, tools and paperwork. It plays amazing and sounds as clear as a bell. No dead spots, no neck moving etc. I am just more comfortable playing 18-19mm spacing and that's why I am letting this one go again. Not an easy decision but I have to be realistic in that this bass needs to be played and I cannot afford an expensive instrument like this one to just sit in its case. The bass is located in the UK, shipping worldwide is no problem. A new bass like this from Modulus with these options would cost somewhere between 7000-8000 Dollars. I got it from a collector who never played this one. I also only played it a few times at home and realized quickly I prefer a wider spacing. So it's pretty much an unused bass. It came from a collector who never played this one. I also only played it a few times at home so it's pretty much an unused bass. She is currently strung with Fodera Nickels 120-40 and sounds amazing Located in the UK Brighton East Sussex will happily ship worldwide Here are some specs: Chechen Top Gloss Finish Alder Body 35″ Scale Length, 24 Frets 17mm Spacing Gloss Finish Neck Phenolic Fingerboard Ying Yang Inlay at 12th Fret Side Dot Inlays Fretboard Dots Bartolini Soapbar Pickups Aguilar OBP-3 Black Hardware my sales feedback :
    1 point
  31. NO LONGER FOR SALE: WITHDRAWN Squier VM Precision I love this bass, it's genuinely lovely. However, I'm giving up music so it needs to be with someone who's going to play it, because basses need to be played. It's not been modified, the pickups etc are as they are. It does have a few screw holes from where some pickup and bridge covers were fitted. It's currently fitted with some Fender flatwounds, which makes it sound even more greaterer than it did before. The bass could be exchanged/dropped off at a convenient place on the M5/M4 around Bristol or Swindon. My brother-in-law travels back to work every Sunday and passes these places and kindly offered to take the bass and meet a buyer at a convenient drop off on a motorway. Body & Bridge: Body: Soft Maple Body Shape: Precision Bass Bridge: Standard 4-Saddle Pickguard: 3-Ply Black/White/Black Finish: Polyester Colour: Amber Neck: Finger Board Radius: 9.5" Radius (241 mm) Scale Length: 34" (863.6 mm) Nut Width: 1.625" (41.3 mm) Inlays: Dot Position Inlays Pickups & Hardware: Hardware: Chrome Tuning Keys: Standard Open-Gear Tuners Pickups: Duncan Designedª PB101 Split Single-Coil Pickup Controls: Master Volume, Master Tone (Knurled Chrome Dome Control Knobs)
    1 point
  32. Two weeks ago I traded a pedal for a fantastic rock cabinet, a Hughes & Kettner QS 810 PRO. That thing is a real tower of power: 1800 Watts and 4 ohms, eight 10" neodymium whizzer cone speakers in a seriously ported cab, so no Ampeg knock-off. One like this: This Friday I laid my hands on a beautiful second hand Fender Bassman 100T. The thought was to mate them two. I had my doubts at first, that the amp would be too weak, but no. No no no! This setup really pushes a lot of air with a tone to die/kill for. Creamy, gooey, just down right nice! Sits in the band's mix like a mountain! The Bassman 100T is a very smart amp, with a feature its big brother the Super Bassman lacks: you can run it without speaker for silent recording! Here are some very nice features: - switchable power: 100 Watts, 25 Watts and 25 Watts silent into the internal power soak, - DI can be tapped afterthe power amp, sending all the gooey stuff to mixer, - switchable 2, 4 or 8 ohms, - Auto BIAS that activates at start-up, - you can set the BIAS from Cool via Normal to Warm in a few steps, - two channels: classic Bassman and modern with overdrive, foot switchable, The tone is classic Bassman with a lot of bottom and body. The overdrive channel works best with a tweeterless cab. It sounded silly with my AccuGroove TRI112L and kind of harsh with my TKS 2126 cabs, so no hi tech cabs for this guy. The amp's front end is very responsive, and reacts to playing dynamics in a nice way. Not with explosions in volume, but rather in wooly creaminess when diggin' in, making the power tubes glow hot. I find this setup very nice for our blues/rock act. Maybe not for gigs in the sacred room, jazz or more unplugged kind of stuff. I ordered some Fender grille cloth that I'm going to spray glue on the metal grille on the H&K cab to make them match. When that is done, I'll post a pic... And - it smells nice...
    1 point
  33. They can indeed, but I get the impression that Pedulla Guitars was a very personal thing to Michael. I don't think he has ever commented on the possibility of handing it over. I don't blame him for saying 'that's it's. Effectively, he has closed his shop having had the final say on every instrument to bear his name.
    1 point
  34. That's where I got mine from, little bit cheaper than elsewhere! It's always better to reduce noise at the source rather then fix it with a noise gate or LPF. A noise gate only does it's thing when you stop playing, you can still hear the noise behind your note, particularly as it decays. The noise I was getting through that Zoom power supply into just a simple One Control Sonic Silver Peg was flipping outrageous, it was louder than the instrument itself! Not sure what was going on there to be honest but that Joyo gadget sorted it 100%.
    1 point
  35. Sounds like the Delano’s are perfectly balanced to let your rig shine.....
    1 point
  36. That makes my light switch digital control... I suppose I work it with my finger!
    1 point
  37. Im not going to make jokes about wooden balls
    1 point
  38. Just bought a Sandberg pre-amp from Dan. Real easy transaction and it was incredibly well packaged to avoid Royal Mail destroying it. Hell of a nice guy and I would not hesitate in dealing with him again.
    1 point
  39. 1 point
  40. OK let me clarify. When I first heard this stuff it sounded mind blowingly heavy powerful, noisy and hard edged. Over the years as music has pushed those boundaries ever farther the context has changed. It now sounds comparatively polite, melodic and, yes, quaint. It has lost that crazy edge with the passing of time. This does not insult, devalue or belittle the music in any way. It has ever been thus. Cutting edge becomes mainstream, wild becomes tame. My dad told me how his father dismissed the music he (my dad) loved as "just a noise" and "not even music". It was Bing Crosby.
    1 point
  41. I wouldn't use this project as a first lesson in soldering if I were you. If you really want to though, get your mate to give you a crash course in the basics and some homework to practice on that sets you up for the job at hand. It's easy when you do all the right things. I enjoy it.
    1 point
  42. I played this (Jabba’s) at the SW Bash - I love it! Would love to own one. Jez. No pressure!
    1 point
  43. Knocking it out the park.....
    1 point
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