Leaderboard
Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/01/21 in all areas
-
Final two steps before tomorrow's 'Chambers for the Superquads' (just you watch - Marvel will nobble that title . Expect a film on Disney+ before spring) marathon, a couple of jobs while the router table was out: Control chamber to final depth and initial back rounding: Initial top rounding: So tomorrow's job will be: - decide on the final positioning of the bridge elements, the fretboard and the pickups - create the three chambers for the Superquads. For this, I will be using the same method outlined for the neck pocket in the Wal save thread half way down Page 7 here: A Very Special Save - Page 7 - Build Diaries - Basschat Thanks for looking6 points
-
Yes - there is a potential issue depending on at which stage Wal fitted the inserts - before or after adding the neck angle shim they glue to the heel. But actually, if they didn't fit the shim first and then drill with absolutely vertical drills (vertical to the body top and neck heel but, therefore, at an angle to the fretboard), they would have the same problem as well. So as long as my holes are 90 degrees to the body top, then they will align to the inserts. If I get time, for them's that have no idea what we're talking about, I'll draw a diagram Anyway - the next scary bit is done. The neck pocket. As all of the chambering, both on this build (for the scratchplate componentry and pickup) and the pickup chambers on @Jus Lukin 's headless, will be using this same method, I'll go into it in a bit more detail. Over the years, I personally have found this absolutely the most accurate and safest way of cutting chambers. Most of my fellow builders use templates and to great effect - but to me, templates usually spell problems. If I was doing repeat builds, then templates would clearly be the way to go, but for 'one-off chambers' - which most of mine are, this is the way I do it: Having marked out the line accurately, I use a forstner bit in my little drill press to hog out around 2/3rds of the depth, with the forstner just short of the chamber outline: I then sharpen my chisels because I need to chisel some seriously accurate edges!: So here, I'm chiselling away the forstner wave residue and then taking the cut, ensuring it is vertical and as accurately as possible, along the inside edge of my outline to a minimum of 10mm depth: I double check with the neck that the fit is spot-on. I also check that the bolts (which are, of course, now too long) still fit in the inserts! If it is and they do, I have an accurate 10mm vertical band that will guide the router bearing to tidy up the chamber sides and deepen it as necessary. I am using a router table here but a hand router (preferably with a decently large base for stability) would work just as well. The bottom-bearing'd router bit simply cannot now dig in anywhere it shouldn't: So the bit tidies up the sides and makes them exactly the same as my chiselled band and I increase the depth a couple of mm at a time to the final depth: Then final checks - first that the neck fits snugly and fully bottoms in the chamber: And a final check that it still all lines up: Which - to everyone's surprise and especially my own - it does So I won't go through the blow by blow, but this is how I will also rout the chambers for the truss rod access, the pickup and the electronic circuitry under the pickguard...and @Jus Lukin 's pickup chambers that will be next6 points
-
Can I say here that I may well be the only person on Basschat to have had a near-death experience involving Maurice Gibb. As a student-holiday postie, I was astride an aged, cantankerous and ludicrously-overloaded Royal Mail bike, teetering along an expensive and exclusive private road in Esher one wintery day in 1986, when blatting round the corner came a shiny new Aston Martin driven, as it turned out, by the very BeeGee in question... It was at that precise moment that the enormous bag of Christmas cards decided to jump ship, depositing itself...and me...in the middle of the road and causing the unsuspecting Maurice to make lots of screeching noises ( I think it was a combination of his brakes and that very falsetto of which there has been some discussion). His reactions were admirable; none of it was his fault and I am here to relate the tale. Anyhow, apropos of nothing much, a little vignette.... And do you know, it never occurred to me at the time to ask him about R*c*e*b*c*e*s.....; I probably should have, but he seemed a little flustered.6 points
-
Which IMO completely negates the point of vinyl as a decent playback medium, if you have to spend that kind of money to recreate what is already lower-quality audio. Plus no matter how much you've spent. it won't remove flaws in the manufacturing process - pops, clicks, surface noise or put the hole any closer to the centre of the record.6 points
-
I put a strap on an instrument and leave it on there. Only comes off for major maintenance etc. So, every guitar gets a strap. This is the way.5 points
-
So clamps off and all looks OK: The chamber will be deepened, cutting through the maple veneer you see here. And some time on the router gets the sides ready for final clean up with cabinet scrapers before I round-over the edges:5 points
-
Very dinged and scarred black 1984 Alembic Spoiler (32" medium scale), weighing in at under 10 pounds. From research I discovered its a very old refin over birds eye maple and with a replacement neck pickup. Up close its really evident how heavily used this bass had been, but from a couple of metres (eg onstage) looks cool AF. I originally paid roughly £1700 including import duty from a Reverb seller in Mexico City and close to £500 at SIMS getting side LEDs and the side of the fingerboard re-lacquered (it was a bit tatty) so its super slick to play. Comes with new Mono gigbag (£180). No box at present * EDIT: BOX ARRIVING THURSDAY 21ST JAN * so its socially distanced pickup from my front drive in SW13 (Barnes, south of Hammersmith Bridge). Pics below taken after LED installation, pics in gigbag taken today. Link to Mexico Reverb ad which shows clearly how battle scarred the bass is https://reverb.com/uk/item/33972935-alembic-spoiler-1984-black NO TRADES as selling down my bass collection to the bare bones.4 points
-
In the words of Crocodile Dundee "That's not a Jackson. THIS is a Jackson"4 points
-
A friend posted this on Facebook - someone has isolated a single audio track from an SACD, giving just lead vocals, bass and drums. It makes for a fascinating listen.4 points
-
4 points
-
4 points
-
4 points
-
Yup. The thing I find most frustrating about all of this is that the decisions made on this were driven by a decision by people who have not got a Scooby Doo on how any of this works - as proven in this thread. Its easy to say "buy British" - but the the complex pieces of string that hold all this together are far from easy to work out. We will see the fall out from this for many years to come... Some people have got very rich from it though. So there is that. They'll be paying all the taxes on their new found wealth... oh no. That will be stashed off shore. But as you say, blue passports... for what they are worth at the moment. Killer form of ID down the post office though I guess.4 points
-
4 points
-
4 points
-
Is the EU purchasing programme a fiasco? I didn’t think so, I didn’t see anything about that. The rollout for sure is and has been handled much better in the UK. I remember reading that the UK buys each dose of Pfizer vaccine for 28 (euros or GBP) whereas the EU buys them for 18 (euros or GBP) - economy of scale.4 points
-
3 points
-
Put some EMG's in my Bullet and changed the pre to the EMG BQC. I think i prefer it over the Delano's...the Delano's were OK but love having the mid control on the BQC. Had to change the crappy EMG plastic knobs - now sporting much improved chrome knobs.3 points
-
£420.00 Much sought after 1st Gen’ 2012 Fender Modern Player HH Jazz Bass in a stunning 3 colour sunburst. Complete in a quality Hicox hard case. Condition of this bass is amazing. The beautiful grain of the mahogany body shows clearly through the finish. The build quality is spot on - among the best I have seen. Body is unmarked and no fret wear. The pickups on this are great and provide a great range of tones. Hardly any sign of wear except for some slight tarnishing on a few of the bridge saddles as shown in the photos. A great bass supplied in a quality hard case (cost £120 alone) UK Shipping for £203 points
-
Looks big but is only the small bedroom 9 foot across 2 and 3/4M, but its an active home studio, almost every day, i love the sound of it, releasing tracks at the mo, im just doing the brass on a funky Reggae type track, just waiting for my living room ceiling to cave in 🙂 so in order to gain some space im just in the middle of making one of these, but with racks at the bottom either side as well.....3 points
-
Which Jackson designed it? Pollock?3 points
-
I had a feeling this would turn into a discussion about sound quality, I've said it before, most people aren't that bothered about the nuances of the sound, took me a while but I realised your mood and the atmosphere are more important when listening to music, I bet most of us have really enjoyed a track more, played on a crappy pub jukebox because we've had a couple of beers and out with mates. If putting a record on a turntable and listening to the stylus hitting the vinyl increases your listening pleasure then so be it.3 points
-
3 points
-
Can you please explain why a better turntable will reduce pops and crackles? I thought that these were due to manufacturing flaws or damage to the record itself. Also while reducing wow and flutter should be a good thing, IMO the relationship of the hole in the "centre" of th record in relation to the grooves is by far the biggest contributing factor. The problem for all analogue music reproduction systems is that they rely on the real-time extraction of the information from the playback media, and any fluctuations in the mechanics of of the playback mechanism will adversely impact on the final sound.3 points
-
I thought I’d posted a couple of pics of my ‘bic ages ago, but looks like I haven’t. 1976 long scale S1 with birdseye maple facings; imported from the US (in the days before customs charges became crippling). I tend to gig with my Warwick (LX Streamer Jazzman) these days*, but the S1 is a lovely old beastie....... *Edit: when we actually were gigging, of course.......3 points
-
3 points
-
Right, I've done the sensible thing (a hard thing to do!) I've picked up (local and socially distanced) a 1yr old pre-owned Millenium MPS-850 with a Mapex stool, and a few little extras for £275 all in. I think at that price I can really give it a good go, and if I want to go for something Roland etc in a few months I can always shift this on an break even fairly easily.3 points
-
3 points
-
3 points
-
I’m loving my Ashdown little bastard for rehearsals and small gigs. Only 30 watts, but 30 valve watts gets pretty loud through a decent speaker. It is just an altogether different thing to my GK mb500.3 points
-
Just looking on the EU website, there is a touring visa which allows non EU nationals to travel in the shengen area for 90 days without additional requirements. So I assume this is what was offered. It is a lot easier to offer something you have already established the rules for.3 points
-
Which to me sounds like they didn't want to roll the standard contract out, they wanted to wrap up touring musicians with business travellers, which I don't think is the same sort of thing, and would have complicated it. Seems very much - here is our standard cut and paste musicians scheme we already do for the rest of the world, can we have that - yes / no. Not like they had any other time to negotiate as it had been left so long I have met DJs who believe they fit in the musician category. Obviously free to talk about what you want, but we have done the vaccine and covid to death in other threads, and to avoid al riding in here on his spitfire to save us, can we sort of have a thread where we can talk about touring musician issues rather than end up at the same (locked) thread about b*xit?3 points
-
Yep I start with all flat. Shape In or Out depends on what I'm playing and who with. Quiet home practice etc it tends to be in, but as I get louder and need to cut through the mix more I take it out. A little bit of drive and compression, crank to ear-bleeding level, grin from ear to ear.3 points
-
There was a wanted ad for a SansAmp yesterday on FB and a number of people replied warning against the fraudster, including one or two I didn't recognise. I can't see the post now, so maybe it's been taken down.3 points
-
Your impression is exactly correct, all models within the Subway line are designed with similar phase response, sensitivity and power bandwidth to work well together. The engineering and math have been done, listening tests agree with the predictions, and it's not influenced by the marketing department. Note that this is not true mixing the Subway cabinets with other manufacturer's cabinets, nor mixing cabinet models from Mesa outside of the Subway models (for example, PH and Scout cabinets may not mix well with Subway cabinets). The most common combination is the 115 with the 210, but the 115 with 112 is not far behind.3 points
-
I just checked the Khruangbin Rig Rundown on Premier Guitar ans Laura says that the SX is her only bass, although Mark Speer did swap out the pickups for Dimarzios. So it’s not stock like I thought. https://www.premierguitar.com/articles/27261-rig-rundown-khruangbin At 16:40 in the video you see her live rig which is just SX bass through a compression pedal into a Fender amp. There’s a copy of a Hofner violin bass that she has as a backup which she’s used on recordings and says it’s easier to play, but she might only have used it at one show. I read she played a Fender VI on the Leon Bridges sessions, I need to check that out with headphones I think. The production on it is so straight yet beautiful. Got me looking at green SX’s now 😆3 points
-
This. Just makes me sigh looking at it. Just need to start saving now...3 points
-
3 points
-
Hey Bassy folk Just received a fantastic custom oak stain bass stand I ordered off Facebook in the post Christmas blues :-S and while typically I keep my buying on more " official platforms such as here or face to face" I was very impressed by the guys photo's and prices and I figured that as i'd had a disappointing Christmas of bass stuff .... Why not treat myself. It arrived this morning tracked Royal mail and for even someone who Got a GSCE "F" in woodwork was an absolute doddle to assemble , The build quality is excellent with lovely soft foams to protect the bottoms of guitars its also waxed rather than stained to protect the finishes and my floor , I'm rather pleased , more than enough to recommend him but obviously this is no way paid or asked for so I wont link directly. His prices and dimensions are as follows , he's based in wales and was willing to do collection withing reason but teir 4 may have scuppered that. hipping to me in London was extra at cost . 3 bay 522 L x 758 H x 465 D £78 4 bay 643 L x 758 H x 465 D £82 5 bay 764 L x 758 H x 465 D £86 6 bay 885 L x 758 H x 465 D £90 Reply or message and i can pass his details on.2 points
-
Ladies, Gentlemen and everyone in between: I proudly present the Brooks Thundervee. A hybrid between a Thunderbird and a Flying V. - Neck through with Korina body wings - Nine ply Korina/mahogany neck - Ebony faceplate on headstock - Red Mahogany stain. Gloss transparent acrylic finish - Rosewood fretboard - 23 Jumbo frets - 34" scale - Handcut Buffalo horn nut - Three ply black-white-black pickguard - Wide travel Thunderbird bridge - String through body ferrules - Hipshot ultralite nickel plated tuners - Spokewheel double action trussrod - 2 x Sixties repro Thunderbird pickups nickel. 9.2 K Ohm - Di Marzio EP111 toggle switch 4PDT for serial mode - 2 x Volume pot Bourns 500 kOhms logarithmic - 1 x Tone pot Bourns 500 kOhms logarithmic - Kemet capacitor 47 nF paper insulation - DR FatBeams 45-105 Electronics circuit by BQ Music Pics of the build process can be found here This is what she sounds like:2 points
-
Hi all, So I very recently acquired this from @Hellzero and it is an astonishing bass! However... I've decided that I want to get myself a good quality electric drum kit (blasphemy I know!) so the last bass in will be the first bass out! This is one of the finest basses I have played in a long time and I have owned and played some of the very best basses money can buy over the years! The tone this puts out is incredible, you can get beautifully crisp, glassy tones for tapping all the way through to deep, smooth bass with everything in between available. This bass is in flawless condition, not a mark.or a scratch on it. The build quality is outstanding, you can see that each end of each fret has been carefullt rounded so when playing up and down the neck the feel is perfectly smooth. The pickups are USA Bartolinis and pre-amp is an active Aguilar OBP-3 pre-amp, this is in my opinion the very best combination of pickups and pre-amp. The top wood is a 1 inch thick slab of beautifully quilted maple with an ash body separated by a purpleheart laminate. The through neck is 5 piece with 2 purpleheart laminates and a super smooth satin finish. The machine heads are Gotoh super lights and the bridge is Hipshot. Its a 34" scale bass with 18mm spacing and it come in at a little over 5kg. The bass was a little over £2500 when new and as mentioned it is in flawless condition. You really wouldn't know its not brand new! Who ever buys this will not regret it. I can post this if absolutely necessary, I would advise we agree to buy a hardcase to ship it in as I do not have one, it will come with a padded gig bag if collected though! I would much prefer it to be collected from me in Basildon, Essex (socially distanced of course). I reserve the right to cancel a sale if we cannot agree on a way to safely post it if you choose postage as I do not want this damaged in transit! I'm very happy to discuss a plan before you commit! These basses do not come up for sale often, I cannot see another pre-owned one for sale anywhere globally and brand new they are close to £2500. Any questions, please do ask, I will respond as soon as possible.2 points
-
For a guy who 'hates routers' you really can do a cracking job with one 🤭 this is going to be one very special bass IMO 👌🏼 And to have two amazing threads running side by side on here is really top notch work @Andyjr1515 Brilliant 👍🏼 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼2 points
-
The revelation of the mechanialilitiness of the elephant has disappointed no-one more than me and has changed what might have been quite pleasant music into some kind of noise-prog. Drums are done. Bass needs filth.2 points
-
2 points
-
They have to be kidding. It’s not April 1 is it?.2 points
-
Which IMO completely negates the point of vinyl as a decent playback medium, if you have to spend that kind of money to recreate what is already lower-quality audio. Plus no matter how much you've spent. it won't remove flaws in the manufacturing process - pops, clicks, surface noise or put the hole any closer to the centre of the record Personally I'd say that in order to get serious hifi reproduction using any medium there's an absolute minimum spend... Frinstance with cd you can achieve reasonable results using a cheap cd player, but not if it's playing into a strained poor quality amplifier and bandwidth limited speakers that distort or have very irregular frequency response curves or impedance that swings wildly with frequency. And the cheap cdp player can be bettered by one which reads more of the information on the disc accurately (stable transports etc), and even more so if digital to analogue conversion is of a higher quality. However, you may get musical enjoyment from a cheap record player, but not much in the way of actual hifi reproduction because of poor tracking, low quality needle/magnet/coil assembly, speed instability, bearing rumble, low frequency feedback from inadequate isolation. Then there's the conversion from RIAA standard - a cheap phono stage won't do it particularly accurately. So while a big step up in price for cd playback will probably give some small benefits, if you want serious vinyl hifi you either need to spend some reasonable money, or be very astute on the 2nd hand market! However, the law of diminishing returns sets in quite quickly... If you look at just the Project line of TTs they start at about £179, up to around £7999 (signature 12). And the top end one doesn't even include a cartridge! The bottom model is capable of reasonable hifi quality - it'll sound OK but won't have anywhere near the detail retrieval or weight (i.e bass quality) of the top one - you could clearly hear the difference between the 2. However, if you move to one of their more mid-range offerings the difference between £7999 and £1049 (the X2) will be much less pronounced, but the X2 will still sound significantly better than the £179 Primary E... You can see where the difference comes by looking at tech specs - the E has speed variance of about 0.8% and wow/flutter of 0.29% with mid-range X2 at 0.25%/0.12% and top line signature at <0.1%/<0.08%. All these differences in spec will mean that the bottom model sounds much thinner, lacks a large stereo image and will suffer far more from pops and crackles that either of the other 2. You'd be surprised just how quiet top flight vinyl can sound - with my set up I find on analogue produced albums that tape hiss is louder than any surface noise (though proper cleaning is also essential (I use a £49.99 Discmagic)). But bear in mind that a Project Experience 2 at £500 2nd hand will sound as good as the £1049 X2 - though both will need a quality phono stage (and amp/speakers) to bring out the best in them!2 points
-
Yeah it looks quite nifty - my only worry is the lack of onboard compression/limiter (whilst they have included a lot of other 'effects' including reverb which I'm really pleased about). Full review imminently - as I type the dispatch notification has just arrived!2 points
-
Indeed, but that doesn't make the same headline as saying that the evil EU hates us now. It is a complex situation and we need to be cautious about 'news': we rarely get all the relevant information from a single source, unfortunately, and it works both ways both for pro and anti-EU stances.2 points
-
2 points