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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/04/24 in all areas
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Take 5 minutes for a story about a very fine chap. Before the start of the pandemic I ordered a Moollon PV having been in Seoul to visit YJ and Andi Roselund at the Moollon workshop a few months before. I was really taken with the PV's tone. So the Pandemic hit and after working in a factory building respirators for the NHS through most of it I then lost my job. Not good karma. Sadly having paid my deposit I wrote to YJ and Andi saying that I could not afford to continue with the purchase and I heard no more. A few weeks later I saw a red PV up for sale and thought no more of it knowing I could not afford another one. 2 1/2 years later I got a message from Andi saying that YJ had not sold the bass it was still there available for me... Jaw dropping moment. They never got the email and YJ hadn't sold it - he kept it for me. What other maker would do something like that? I had in the meantime managed to get myself back on my feet and could complete the sale. Last week I took delivery of the bass I ordered three years ago. Delivered in pristine condition and sounding like a complete beast. I'm overjoyed to have this bass. I thought I had lost it and out of the kindness of YJ I do. What a bloody awesome bloke - unreal. The bass BTW is staggering, the low end is so deep but articulate and the higher register is thick like a short scale. Its ridiculously good, and oh the colour.. Red............ Red...... Red........15 points
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9 points
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8 points
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PRICE DROP: £590 Selling my beloved Mesa Fathom. This is a seriously loud all-tube preamp head with a huge amount of tone shaping at earth shattering volumes, unbeatable build quality and more headroom than you'd ever need. Collection from Brighton hugely preferred, or I am happy to meet in person. I canalso post at buyers expense if needed. Wattage - 600 Watts @ 4 or 2 Ohms / 320 Watts @ 8 Ohms Power Amp Type - Trans-Class™ Power w/8 Power MOSFET's & 8/4 or 2 Ohm Impedance Switch Preamp - Vacuum Tube Preamp w/ 1x Mesa 12AX7 In the last 10 years it's been used at the odd local show, mainly used for recording or home use. Never had an issue live or elsewhere. Serviced twice by MJ Still in Lancing, always came back with a clean bill of health, it's been well looked after.7 points
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A huge thanks for all those providing suggestions and taking the time to post links etc. It reminds me why I joined the forum way back in 2007; it's such a helpful and friendly community. For those interested, I've gone ahead and placed an order for one of these Ibanez models https://www.ibanez.com/usa/products/detail/gsrm20_2y_06.html. Although it will take a couple of months to arrive I am sure she will absolutely love it! Whilst not available in first choice colour pink, purple has been confirmed as being a "second best colour" - so all good there! The plan will be to see how she does, then move onto a full-size body / weight / scale length version in a few years time; much like I did when I started the double bass around the same age. I will update again once it's arrived and I've set it up. Thanks again, Greg7 points
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Warwick Streamer 1986. £2000 This is from the hand built golden era of Warwick and is an absolute beauty. It’s in stunning condition for it’s 38 years. All original (except one replacement knob and the battery cover both of which are later Warwick genuine replacements). Preamp is one of the sought after Vlado hand built preamps. Pickups are the exceptionally rare and sought after Seymour Duncan with dip switches fitted at the factory as a new option and unlike many, they are in full working order. Super light, super slim neck and body. It’s a joy to play, being recently set up by Dave Wilson. I’d always wanted one of these since I started playing in ‘86 but the neck is just too slim and I don’t find it works for me as I’m used to wide, five string necks. Happy to keep it as a piece of wonderful wall art but it should be played really. I've owned it since around Dec 2021. I don't have a case for it, but I'm sure I could find a generic hard case in the loft if you need one. I'm a long time and known Warwick user on the forums. (I also have '91 Thumb NT, '03 Infinity NT and Corvette Ltd ) Happy for a chat or come up and play it - I’m in the Tyne Valley, UK. Warwick build sheet from the factory (although these aren't always 100% correct) Year 1986 Month May Number 222 Neck Wood Wenge Wood with Maple Lamination Stripes Fingerboard Wenge Wood with mother of Pearl Dot inlays Frets Bronce Warwick Frets Nut Just a Nut Brass Version Neck construction Neckthrough Body 2 pcs. solid US Cherry Wood Surface Oil Finis / BeeWax surface Pickups active Seymour Duncan JJ Pickups with frequency switches Electronic active MEC 2 Band Electronic Hardware Gold Hardware made by Schaller for Warwick Made in West Germany / Pretzfeld / Franconia6 points
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Thank you everyone for your kind words and thoughts - it has really helped me get through the day...6 points
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Well…after a bit of a wait, and a bit of Wayne Carini style “it’s all about the chase” behaviour… A mate had bought a 70’s one on a whim and I was absolutely smitten with it…but he wouldn’t sell. Off I set on my little search…found via the Shergold owners group on Facebook. Original 1980 case too. its very clean overall with some edge marks. Not bad for 44 years old.5 points
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I love building guitars. I hate building jigs. It's a personality defect I know, but I resent having to do it. So I thought I'd show you a couple of my fuuuugly jigs, that seem to work just well enough that probably I'll never upgrade them. First is the top thickness guage. The guage itself was a cheapo from Amazon. A piece of scrap clamped above the table, and a piece of threaded rod going through a hole in my table. A plastic knob thingamy stops the top from getting scratched. I then write in pencil on the top what the thickness is at each point. It's pretty much a consistent 5mm, so I'm going to go back to the drill press and do another series of holes at just over 4mm. Which strangely is what I thought I did last time, but there you go. That's why you measure twice..... I should also say that pretty much everything I'm doing with this build is copied directly from Ken Parker. He's done an incredible series of videos called Archtoppery, which if you are interested and have a spare 30 hours or so, they are amazing. He's hands down my favourite builder, an absolute genius. Here if anyone is interested: https://kenparkerarchtops.com/archtoppery5 points
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As already advised, for speaker cables go to @Chienmortbb He has taken over from another Basschatter and makes cables from the highest quality components at very reasonable prices. Many brand names rely on snake oil to justify their high prices. These ones rely on reputation on here. I know which I trust more!5 points
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I bought this bass today. Luckily I live a bit nearer Perth (area) than perhaps most of you do. Absolutely zero issues and very good condition in general - the seller just probably isn’t a much of a gearhead compared to most Basschat people (he was a bit taken aback when I explained exactly how the controls work, though he had owned it for quite few years). I used borrowed Alembics on two Whitesnake albums and a few other sessions, and owned a new 20th Anniversary model briefly before finances became tight and it had to go.5 points
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Nice! The best colour for these — looks great! For a decent strap to go with it, I'd recommend the Perri's suede one with sheepskin pad (available from amazon) — I have a pair of these in blue and one in black to go with my JMJ mustangs and they are really comfy. She'll also need an amp of course...4 points
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Very true! What's that old British saying about 'not getting ideas above your station!'4 points
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This is often a BC way of saying "keep it simple cos that's the only way to do it that isn't blatant showing off!" 😁 I mean, there's all sorts of songs - Waterfront with its 1 note (though Simple Minds did far more complex stuff too), Rhythm Stick, School Days... But there seems to be lots of folks who are instantly turned off if music is at all complicated (Rhythm Stick excepted!) - this is why Mr Sheeran and Take That are multi-millionaires and Mörglbl are at best niche despite being completely awesome musicians. In the UK there's a weird sort of anti-intellectual thang going on; when I was a kid you should have heard the jeering from my 13 year old classmates when they discovered I'd read both the Iliad and the Odyssey. If a red-top newspaper ever reports anything scientific it's always prefaced by "Boffins have discovered", as if Boffins are a different species from yer average Joe and somehow to be pitied. I mean why would you tinker about with all this cleverness and not be watching the footie or enjoying the X Factor? The only sorts of knowledge that are acceptable under this scenario are an ability to recite every FA cup winner since 1921 or the exact exhaust valve clearance of a 1968 Ford Anglia. That's proper bloke stuff innit, not wishy-washy wet swot stuff! I blame The Beano...4 points
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4 points
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Have a little bit of a clearout and I have for sale a set of original covers from a 62 Precision and 62 Jazz. In great condition with the correct screws, although the jazz are repro/newer the P is original. £200 each I have a pre CBS P/J bridge and 62 & 68 Tuners & tort plates too if anyone is looking let me know and I can send pics.3 points
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Ibanez ATK 300 active bass Made in Korea 1995 C 50XXXXXX = Cort Factory, 1995. 3 band active eq so very versatile with lots of tone options. ATK pickup with three position switch:- Trad and bright= single coil P bass like tones Humbucker =Stingray like tones Very well made bass, looks like solid ash body (heavy bass) . Decent condition, recent setup and new strings, plays well. Pickguard slight distorted and a few marks on the back of the neck that's all I can find. Comes with Ibanez (Levys) deluxe gig bag Have boxes and bubblewrap so can post. Thanks Neil3 points
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Up for sale/trade is my 1985 made in Japan medium scale Squier Precision bass. I've not had this long, but during that time I've realised I prefer short scale (30") basses with narrower nuts. Ideally I'd like to trade this for a Fender Japan Jazz Junior, but might be tempted by other 30" scales. The bass has a few knocks and dings (cosmetic only) but the neck is in great shape and it plays really well. A dark tort pickguard has been fitted complete with the pickup from a Mexican Player Precision. The wiring loom has been replaced too (original pickup etc not included). The bass weight is 3.685kg or 8.12lbs. At some point in the past it looks like it had a Fender bridge cover fitted. Set up with D'Addario medium scale nickel rounds (45/65/80/100) which suit it very well. The bass is in Beccles, Suffolk, but I do have a box so can post.3 points
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I’ve had this bass for around 5 years now I think. It’s a cracker so it’s a very reluctant sale…. Just the usual GAS attack that I may regret later…. I’m told it was one of the first Maruszczyks to come into the UK, in 2015, and originally belonged to @wateroftyne. You can read its origin story here: http://basschat.co.uk/topic/263423-nbd-maruszczyk-jake-pj-fender-sandberg-lakland-killer/ It’s very well made, very light – chambered body, around 7.5lbs – and balances perfectly. Since I bought it, I’ve replaced the pickups with a DiMarzio Model P + J set, changed the bridge to a Hipshot KickAss, and fitted Dunlop strap locks. It’s an alder body with flame maple top, cool block inlays, cream binding, USA Hipshot Ultralite tuners, and a neck profile based on a 1971 Precision bass. Controls are master volume, master tone, and a 3 way pickup selector (the change from 2 volumes was done by a previous owner). I think a new Maruszczyk with this spec would be over £1500 now? In term of condition, I would say it’s very good. it’s got the light surface marks you’d expect for a bass of this age, and there’s one tiny ding on the neck, again by previous owner, on the treble side of the neck around the 9th fret that I’ve tried to show in 1 pic. (I’m very picky about stuff like this but I have never ever noticed it while playing, due to its location). Not really interested in trades – I have my eye on a couple of specific things – unless it was part-ex for a G&L CLF L1000, maybe a JMJ Mustang, or maybe a nice unlined fretless. Local pickup in Edinburgh preferred, but can meet halfway within reason, or ship at your expense if necessary.3 points
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We headlined at a gig tonight. Not a lot of punters, mainly the other bands there, but we had a blast. I think my right arm feels a bit sore from how hard I was hitting the strings. Home now and I've had some toast and the cat has had a good fuss on the sofa. Bedtime methinks!3 points
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Was looking for a trade but now sorted, so, now just looking to clear out stuff that doesn't get used as we've moved to a bungalow and lost a few rooms so space is at a premium. I bought this as a bitsa. It probably does, but may not have Fender origins however, it plays like a dream, as good as any standard Fender jazz I've ever owned. Nice low action, working truss rod. Wilkinson Jazz set, Wilkinson gold coloured bridge, gold control plate, gold tuners, gold strap buttons and gold Fender anniversary neck plate. It's very pretty in metallic cerise and black headstock and the tort plate. 38mm at the nut, 19mm string spacing, 9lbs 2oz at the bathroom scales. No 100% idea of neck or body origin but I would guess it's a Fender neck as it's such nice quality. It has a head-stock Ser No dating to 1978 which is obviously not correct. (S829127) Neck has a beautiful honey hue to it and is seriously comfy and nippy. It sounds great, it plays great. Now £200 No case so handover preferred, or the usual dodgy car park within 15 / 20 miles of me. Welcome to come and try in Ashill near Swaffham/Watton IP25 7DA3 points
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3 points
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I know what it means in that context, but I enjoy a good fnar as much as the next punter3 points
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Just a warning. I bought this bass (https://richtonemusic.co.uk/fender-mustang-bass-1975-sunburst-hard-case-2nd-hand/) and had it delivered. When I tried to change to flats the increased tension necessitated a turn on the truss rod. Unfortunately, the rod has seized which either means it needs some pretty major lubrication or it's at the end of its travel. I pointed this out to them and they agreed to a rapid return. It was picked up yesterday and my refund was processed today. (Happy days) Unfortunately, they seem to have just advertised it for sale again without acknowledging the issue. They may have fixed it in the last 3 hours, which is great. But I'd exercise caution. Other than the truss rod it was a lovely bass, so here's hoping they have fixed it!3 points
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There's long been an anti-'intellectual' prejudice, not just the right wing press but across UK society at large, which doesn't exist across western Europe. Take opera for example. Here it's 'music for snobs' but in Italy (which I know best) it's for everyone and anyone. There there's no association between high art and social class. In France, which I've also lived in, there are living philosophers that are near household names. It most definitely is a British disease. Maybe it's similar in other anglophone countries I can't say. There you go, If I was overheard saying 'anglophone' in an English pub I'd get my head kicked in. As for 'boffins' that equates with nerd and geek in the UK and the US (or whatever the equivalent of boffins is) for that matter. Look at some English phrases e.g. 'smart Alec', 'too clever by half', these are perjoratives (now I've gone and done it). Going back to music, it's quite depressing too be reminded how Oasis and Spice Girls fever gripped the general British public back in the 90s a time when 'Jack the lad' publications like Loaded and FHM were go-to reading for males under 30.3 points
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Last night was the first rehearsal with the full line up, the rest of the full line up being the 3 backing singers. Sounding pretty good, gonna be fun when we start gigging 🙂3 points
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Must admit I`ve never really been one for asking studio people what they think of the material, if they offer an opinion or suggestion then great but otherwise I just acknowledge that they must listen to so much that that it`s probably seldom they hear something they really like. That said I do like to receive input on arrangements/playing etc, on our current album which is due for release in June the producer suggested a few things on bass which I did and they certainly add to the tracks, never too old to learn.3 points
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I've played for a long time, I got interested when I was a teenager back in the 90s. I had an old Italian bowlback (which I still have but find uncomfortable) and for the last couple of years a Sears catalogue Harmony archtop. I've also played octave mandola and now cittern. But I've just picked up this guy to add to the family, it's a Fylde from 1999, before the current Touchstone models. It's lovely to play and has good sustain across the range - not quite the type of woody punch you'd want for bluegrass but great for my mostly Scottish and Irish repertoire. I have D'addario EFW74 flatwound strings on there at the moment, I like how clean and round a note they give, without any clang on the bottom string.3 points
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3 points
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Last night’s gig was one I never anticipated, wanted, but felt compelled and eventually pleased to do. My son died three weeks ago suddenly from a second heart attack a week after having stents for the first one, seems the surgeon did half a job. Julian was 46, three kids, fitness fanatic, my best friend, top DJ and drummer Today was his funeral. His widow had booked an acoustic duo for the wake in the local pub. However, the girl singer had to leave early for some reason; the landlord knew I played and pointed me out to the remaining guitarist/singer suggesting I might help, so as my gear was in my car I played bass and sang with him for the second set. It was good distraction therapy, busking 15 numbers I’d never played before with a guy I’d never met. Despite this glimmer of light in a dark, dark day I’ll never be able to rationalise why I’m still here at 74 to write this while he will never read it. Parents shouldn’t have to bury their children...3 points
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Our own sound & lights. We only travel with all that stuff for large premium pay gigs. Which isn't often as most of those gigs provide sound & lights. I don't know what any of it is. We're still paying for it. Daryl3 points
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A Little Easter Present... Not a Golden Egg but a Golden Face, replacing the Orange Juice.3 points
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NBD yesterday. Sire U5 fretless from Thomann. Quite a lot vested in this for me, as I sold two basses to raise the cash for this. Suffice it to say, it was worth it. So far I am very pleased with the little Sire. Others have reviewed the fretted U5 and as far as I can tell, this is identical save the black plastic inserts where the frets would normally go. It seems to be really well made for this price point. Fit and finish is spot on right down to the set up. It perhaps needs a bit more relief on the neck but that is easily fixed with a tweak of the truss rod. The neck has a lovely feel with beautifully rolled edges and an extremely thin matte coating on the back (gloss on the board). At the moment I can’t think of anything I would want to change on it. Even the OEM flat wound strings are good. They have a nice feel and suit the instrument well. I’m not sure what brand they are: not the usual D’Addarios, as they have blues silks at both ends and plain ball ends. Time will tell how the hardware lasts but it seems perfectly acceptable. The machine heads are identical to Northwest Guitars own brand vintage style, which are sold as an upgrade for Squiers, etc, so I am hoping they will last a bit. The bridge is chunkier than your average Squier ash tray and the ridged saddles are a nice touch. It can also be strung through. Unfortunately, it has an unusual screw at each corner mounting system, which makes upgrading a little less straight forward. As can be seen in the picks, it has a flamed maple top with edge binding and a plain painted brown back. It’s a carved top, which stops it from being a completely slab body. It gives it an arm contour of sorts but no belly cut. Viewed from the side the profile seems to do the reverse and actually bulge at the belly but it is comfortable on a strap nevertheless. Despite the maple top and binding it seems very light because the body is quite thin front to back. I haven’t had a chance to weigh it but I would guess around 7.5 lbs. I would certainly put this on your list, if you are looking for a short scale fretless. It is reasonably priced and nicely made. Bizarrely, it cost £40 more than the fretted version at Thomann.3 points
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3 points
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A discussion about tuning that rapidly escalates into a fist fight - definitely takes me back to a couple of past studio sessions...3 points
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Apologies. Work got a little manic, but I'm back for part four of three – finishing with the finishing. I've tried a bunch of different techniques for applying finishes over the years, with varying degrees of success. My home workshop is just my garden – and it's not a very big garden at that – which makes using spray finishes unpleasant. In order to make a spray booth you have to tie a bunch of old sheets to trees, washing lines etc., and hope that the fumes don't get ignited by one of your neighbour's spliffs. (Here's a guitar being painted in what passes for my spray booth). This is no fun, and it also makes you reliant on getting perfect weather (low humidity, hot but not too hot, no wind to blow the sheets everywhere, no family gatherings on the other side of the hedge). Perfect weather isn't easy to come by in the UK, so I try to avoid spraying as much as I can. What I've settled on is a brush on gloss polyurethane lacquer called Mann's Extra Tough, which is designed for worktops and the like. My technique involves doing many, many coats of laquer and then sanding/buffing to a mirror finish. It's labour intensive, but the lack of fumes and overspray means it's easy to contain and you can do it inside. This was the view from where I sat, working from home during the first few weeks of lockdown. Every now and then, between nervously checking the news and working, I'd get up and apply a quick coat of lacquer. Here's the body and neck (finished with the same stuff and same technique, just with more masking tape), curing in my climate controlled hot-room. This is what it looks like once all the sanding and buffing has been done. Pretty good for brush-on laquer in an attic, I think. I'd added the copper shielding foil by that stage, which is a straighforward process of cutting & sticking and giving yourself hundreds of little cuts on your hands (like paper-cuts, except from something even sharper!). Here's the wiring harness from the old bass, twisted into a bizarre and stiff shape by 15 years crammed into a too-small space. I replaced some of these components – moving the active/passive switch from a push-pull on the volume knob to a separate DPDT switch. Here's a close of up its guts, mid-way through the wiring process. I'm not very tidy when it comes to electrics, as you can see. You can't really see it under the nest of preamp cabling, but there's another DPDT switch under there that switches the humbucker between series, parallel and singlecoil (in reverse polarity to the jazz at the neck). My original intention was for there to be four knobs (rather than the original's 2 plus 1 stacked). It would have had separate bass and treble knobs, with the active/passive switch also flipping the treble knob to work as a passive tone. That was why I moved the switch off the volume pot. However, I discovered mid-way through the build process that centre-detended 50k linear pots are surprisingly expensive, and decided not to bother. The fourth knob, therefore, is a passive tone that's only active whewn the preamp is switched off. I've used it perhaps three times, but it's nice to have. Here's the finished bass next to the carcass of the old one, so you can see the relative size and shape. The bridge is a Schaller, I think, with through body stringing and the tuners are the originals from the OLP. And here's a picture taken outside, so my crap camera could give you a better idea of the colour. And the back, showing the rather nice neck transition.3 points
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Just on the way home from a bloody marvellous Katy Hurt gig at the Fiddler’s Elbow in Camden. Was hot, was rocking, was great fun. Roll on the two Northern dates in a fortnight. And hopefully many more as the summer gets into gear…2 points
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2 points
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IIRC Bridge Screw Mounting Holes @ 35" from Back of the nut seems to be the standard for 34" to Saddle for the G... and not likely to be shorter... Squier P with a High Mass Ibby GSR200 Ibby SR300 P Bitsa2 points
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Seems like an oversight not to have guitar lab/Tonelib compatibility, and also no android app (although looking at the reviews of the G2 one in Play store, maybe we're not missing anything 😅). Hopefully they will address this. It's not an issue for me as I don't have any patches I want to port across. I also find the UI on the pedal simple to navigate and set my sounds up, so the lack of software support isn't an issue, however it seems like a glaring omission which will certainly put some people off.2 points
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2 points
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Hello All, I would like to let you know about the excellent service I received from Jack at Jack’s Instrument Services in Manchester. I recently bought a 2nd hand Alusonic Django bass from a well known shop based in the Midlands. Unfortunately upon receipt the strings were dead and required changing, the result of this being an A string that rattled and buzzed quite badly. To be honest I should have sent the bass back but decided it would probably cost me money along with the degree of risk of sending an expensive instrument back by carrier. Upon searching google for a suitable instrument repairer I found Jack’s in Cheetham Hill, messaged him and he replied promptly telling me it was very likely the nut on my bass was incorrectly cut and he was confident he could remedy the issue. I dropped my bass in earlier today and guess what, Jack was spot on with his diagnosis. He was able to craft and fit a new buffalo horn nut which blended in perfectly on my black bass and carry out a really professional set up which resulted in the bass playing perfectly, not a buzz or a rattle in evidence. All for what can be described as a reasonable price all things considered. Suffice to say if you’re in or near Manchester and you need a bass or guitar repairing or setting up, look no further. Jack will be able to help get your treasured instrument back to its absolute best. Highly recommended!!2 points
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I'm back in the Core club, hopefully third time lucky! I've kept selling them when I've gone into a band where I don't need fx, thinking individual pedals will be simpler and cheaper, then bought again when I'm in bands that need more fx. It's a costly business model, perhaps this time I'll learn my lesson and just keep it regardless. I played it with a band that doesn't need many fx last night (just compressor, drive, eq, hpf) and without telling people I'd changed anything the Drummer was very complimentary of the sound "what have you changed? It's the best I've heard you sound". So, an endorsement of the Core for bread and butter sounds, and in a smaller package than even having just those few individual pedals. A couple of criticisms though: I clicked the tuner off once (2x footswitch press) and must have then accidentally pressed one footswitch - changing the Preset to something I didn't want without my realising until the wrong sound was coming out. Not being able to delete fx from the chain: it's not a big deal to just put all the un-used ones at the end of the chain and turned off, but there's potential for confusion and accidentally turning the wrong thing on, if they could just be deleted it'd make things simpler and more foolproof. Boss should have copied the Helix footswitch ideas: dull/bright lights and soft-touch. ...and I don't know why no-one other than Source Audio (and perhaps FI, and to a lesser extent Zoom) can really nail digital envelope filters and synth sounds.2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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I wouldn't go hopping on that band wagon. If loaded with premium 8 inch drivers the total cone displacement will be perhaps 1000cc. Four tens of equal quality would have 900cc of cone displacement, which is close enough to call it even. The response of the eights might be a bit better in the highs, but by placing them side by side much of that advantage is lost to comb filtering. That side by side placement also loses midrange off-axis response compared to vertically arrayed tens. Tens of equal quality will go lower than eights. A pair of two tens is a smaller arrangement, and you can leave one of them at home when you don't need both. IMO all things considered those considering one should reconsider.2 points
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I'm working on the inside carve. At the moment I'm doing it all with a gouge. It's probably a bit small (Sweep 5, 18mm in case anyone is interested), but it's an utter utter joy. The grain is tricky. The middle section (marked in pencil) runs opposite to the areas either side. I wake up sweating in the middle of the night just thinking about tearout.....2 points
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Yeah - under the truss Rod cover is a stamp finishing in 80, meaning it’s one of the later ones - no flaky finish, and a “long horn” - pretty cool. There were some of these bodies still knocking about until a few years ago apparently. The case is hilariously aged - covered in stickers from 1992/1991 gigs for “Konkrete Hamster”2 points
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Got this in a trade with a friend. Never owned a shortscale bass, or a Gibson for that matter, before. It's fun and easy to play, and sounds very old school, especially with the flatwounds. It's basically the opposite of my Warwicks so both the sound and the feel is very unfamiliar, but maybe I'll try it in the fuzzed-out doom band and see how it behaves.2 points