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Showing content with the highest reputation on 20/04/24 in all areas

  1. Ok so my GK MB112II combo is loud. Weirdly loud for such a small unit. But when I’ve taken it out the house it’s too small to be able to hear it properly as it’s firing along the floor. So I bought an amp stand. Which didn’t work as it was designed for a guitar amp which is shallower. There might be better ones which work better for my amp but I didn’t have time to find one as I needed one for last night. So I bought a £9 bit of wood, 22mm x 144mm by 1800mm and made one. I cut a 90 degree angle in 2 identical length at the same time so each side was identical, then braced it together with various bits of wood until I got bored. I just tried to get the biggest tilt on the amp with the 144mm wood width - no audio science here. The width is determined by the space inbetween the (rather large) amp feet. Glued and screwed together and sanded all over and it was done. So the amp fires at me direct when it’s maybe 2m away approximately, it’s super solid and quite light and easy to pack away with my other gear. I might varnish it, I might not! Anyway, I’ve not seen anyone else with something like this or even seen one for sale (I didn’t really look to be honest I just needed a solution fast!) but it works perfectly and costs so little!! if you need something like this have a go at making it yourself, it’s not hard and doesn’t need any special tools.
    20 points
  2. Hello For sale my amazing Maybach Motone P bass Year 2024. Gigbag and certificat. Rare bass on market. The best PB i have test. The sound is crazy. The confort is perfect 👌 very balanced bass. Only 3,7 kgs ! Alder body Indian rosewood fretboard Maple neck Lollar pickup !!! CTS Gotoh Res-O-Light tuners - Very light Shipping possible Price in Euros : 1800€ My videos : Photos :
    11 points
  3. Second two of 4 gigs this week for me. Thursday was at my local pub with the acoustic duo. Got there at 7pm to find it full, mainly diners. Plenty of requests, including ‘Man who sold the world’ and ‘Starman’ - they still like Bowie round here! Free drinks for us, so as I walked to the gig I availed myself of a couple of pints, unusual for me. Home before midnight, and another gig arranged there later in the year. Last night I was at Redditch Palace Theatre with The ELO Experience. A small Grade 2 listed theatre with a modern facade but original(ish) auditorium, first opened in 1913. Capacity of 420 so a sell out gig. Great appreciative crowd as always here, most people up on their feet for the second set. Since I sold my GK 1001RB amp last week, I used my GK800RB head and it sounded fine into my GKNeo410. Small very raked stage meant not much room but we managed ok. On to Shrewsbury today for a gig at The Severn Theatre tonight.
    11 points
  4. Afternoon its been a. While since I did a NBD thread! Been waiting for this for a while as they don’t come up for sale too often Fender AVRI 75 jazz 5 1/2 hr round trip this morning to collect this, well worth it Owned from new by previous owner and looks like it just came out of the factory, all covers included as is the original bridge serial number dates it to 2005 Currently sat in my lounge whilst the trusts settles down Tony
    10 points
  5. Played at The Pit at McCann's Rock and Ale bar in Newport last night. Really good fun. Good setup with cabs and drum kit provided, so you just need to rock up with heads and breakables. We hit everything a bit too fast, which we haven't done previously. Need to work out a signal to slow it down a bit. I dropped my pick twice as well, which doesn't usually happen, so that was annoying. Still, good fun and people seemed to enjoy it! We played with a death metal band called Cremulation and a another doom band, Damek, who we're hoping we can arrange for them to come to Bristol at some point. This was the setup. We're Hora, and the gear I used was my Dingwall into my GX-100 and then my ABM-600.
    8 points
  6. People are quick to moan, but I also like to be quick to praise where it is due. All sorts of grief with the DHL (Damage Handling Loons) over the delivery of my new Fender Precision after a phone dall from DHL to tell me theyd damaged it. George at Andertons was cool, told me not to worry, they'd sort out any damage. Just get it delivered then make an assessment and let him know immediately and he'd sort it. Fortunately the hard case and bass within were fine, it was just the packaging that DHL had mullered. I phoned George back to advise the bass had arrived undamaged, and thanked him for his reassurance. I mentioned that G had been cut a little short and as I tried to tune it beyond F it just slipped round the capstan. Well, not 20 hours a later a full set of spanking new Fender 45's drop through my letter box, fortunately delivered by a different company who didn't manage to drive a forklift over it. I'd have been happy with the one string, but a new set was a very pleasant surprise. Even better as I actually quite like Fender rounds. So top marks to Andertons. Reassuring on the phone, poised and ready to help refund/replace if the bass or case had arrived damaged, and super generous with the strings when I only needed the one. Well done. If anyone from Anderton's is reading this, thank you. You'll be top of the list next time I get a tax rebate that the missus doesn't know about and I go bass shopping.
    6 points
  7. So, yesterday, this arrived. Before we get to the photo, if anyone doesn't like pointy things, leave. There is nothing here for you but pain. I ordered this in 2021. How has it taken so long you ask? There was a thing called covid if I recall. Also, there were also hilarious parts problems on backorder for ages. Enough of that nonsense. What is it and where is it made then? Grainger basses and guitars are up near Peterborough, and around the time of one of the lockdowns they posted a bass in this shape that had a mad blue acrylic top. The cogs started turning. So, my idea was to have this wired like an Alembic Series 1 bass and it is. After chatting to Nuno at Lusithand about it I bought some filters off him (his stuff is great by the way - check out his site) with the caveat that it might not work. Undeterred, I sought the advice of the basschat massive and many thanks to @Hellzero who provided the Jack wiring diagram. Basically, the bass can be used stereo or mono with different jacks (like a Rickenbacker), but it's active with a filter and volume for each pickup also a pickup selector. So there's 2 jack outputs. I also got Darren and Gavin to make the bass modelling the neck on my own Alembics. They've done that amazingly precisely. Top and back is flame maple, body is walnut with headstock facings and neck strings. There is a touch of neck dive, but I've not used a wide strap yet. The bass is quite light as the upper wing is chambered. Naturally, I've got a hipshot on it for drop D and there's a brass Warwick Just a Nut too. Bridge is Babicz mono rails to accommodate the narrower spacing. Inlays are mother of pearl. Pickups are Nordstrand Zen Blades wired in parallel to keep as much top end as possible. The reason being is that Lusithand Filters go to 4kHz give or take, whereas Alembics go to 6.6kHz. So, does it sound like an Alembic? In a word, yes. If you want that John Entwistle 1982 Who bass sound, you'll get it. Or if you want a great clean sound it'll do that too. Darren, Gavin and Nuno were fantastic throughout this especially when there were wiring issues we had to resolve. If you're looking for a custom bass made by a British company (or anyone actually), then Grainger do really exceptional work. Also, Nuno at Lusithand makes really good preamps and pedals which are well worth checking out.
    6 points
  8. Hi , I have bought this beautiful amplifier recently here out of a compulsive buying moment 🙂 I am a keyboard player that plays bass occasionally and I've always been in love with that vintage Motown sound... Now that I have come back to reality I realised that this is a luxury I can't carry on... This is what I paid it for and I'd like to sell it for the same amount. It's reasonably priced given that there are a couple out there that go for much more. Enough about me and more info about the beauty: I bought it from the 2nd owner in London that Bought it in the USA in 2005 from its original owner who at that point was elderly and hadn't used it for many years. It was working but needed a full service. The speaker was replaced with a JBL D140F, and all the caps replaced, and the 'death cap' mod to a three lead mains plug done. The tubes are the original Ampeg/Sylvania tubes, and yes i can't believe either they don't need to be changed, the amp works absolutely great and it is very quiet. It sounds incredibly good. That Motown and funky tone. The JBL D140F gives it a warm and punchy sound with creamy trebles. I am the 3rd owner and this has been carefully look after in my studio. I need some money to cover cost of my album and sadly this needs to go. You are welcome to come by and try it yourself. Clean and warm from 1-5 and then starts to break up from 5-7 with that awesome saturation. As you can see from the pictures it is in pretty good original and unmolested condition, but obviously the tolex does show it is from 1963. The amp Head is in great condition with the blue light still shining. I chose not to repair the small tolex tears, thinking it was better to keep it as original as possible. There is no dolly. It retains the weird octal plug for the speaker connection that was used for a year or two around 1963. Everything about this dates it correctly to mid 63. Serial number and circuit diagram are correct, and the pots all date to late 62/early 63. Ampeg used the Random Navy Flair until early 63 then switched to the Blue Diamond during the year. It is still a 117V head and I use it with a step-down transformer and all work perfectly, will be sold with it. Delivery can be arrange with a private courier or if you're not too far I can delivery myself nice and safe. The amp is advertised somewhere else as well. Send a message to arrange viewing.
    6 points
  9. Hooray, another Brooks bass is born! The Brooks FV-12 - Korina body wings - Bookmatched Quilted Maple top - Nine ply Korina/Mahogany Neck through - Cherry Burst high gloss finish - Pearloid binding - Ebony fretboard - Mother of Pearl position dots. Aluminium Circle dot for 12th - Jumbo frets - 30 1/2" scale - Buffalo horn nut - ETS Custom made twelve string brass bridge and tailpiece. Black - Two spokewheel double action trussrods - Carbon reinforcement strip in the neck - Pickups: Lace Alumitone DB7, Black - Controls : volume, volume, tone - 0.047mfd capacitor - Gotoh GB 350 lightweight bass tuners, Black - Gotoh ST-31 octave string tuners, Black - Output: Pure Tone Multi Contact jack - d'Addario custom strings - Weight: 4.3 kg In posts below I'll show pics of the build process.
    5 points
  10. Completed a week of Me and My Girl at the Swan Theatre in Worcester for the ever excellent WODs. Properly old school show, which included the running time, full 3 hours with the interval and long sections of dialogue so concentration after the day job wasn’t always easy. This coupled with the fact the chart pretty looked the same for every song, every conceivable root fifth octave it felt like in every key. Love playing with the band though, great players and camaraderie, will be back for the youth show in August which is Addams Family. Obligatory gear shot- G&L LB100 with chrome flats and nordymute, little mark tube and db 110 cab, one trip to the car!
    5 points
  11. Bongos. They look like an overdone, gaudy, tasteless, ostentatious 80s sports car designed by an LSD-fuelled lunatic in the grip of a psychotic episode, available only in a range of hideous, eye-scorching colours that scream of 'Dante meets Bosch in a crack lounge'. Horrendous looking things. I'd absolutely love one.
    5 points
  12. “This 1-owner bass came to us via the cousin of its original owner… He played the bass locally in bands until the early 80s when he sadly passed away. Since then the bass has remained in its case with his cousin.“ Blimey, how big’s the case?! Or how big’s the cousin?!
    5 points
  13. That's just the sort of economic argument I fall for.... I can buy these and say I've saved £8k.
    5 points
  14. Have now sanded, primed, filled, primed, felled again, sanded again and readied the pickguard. about to paint it in satin black. Wish me luck <gulp>
    5 points
  15. I’ve played in a lot of 3 piece bands over the last 35 years. Expanding on my Jack Bruce comment… there is loads that can be done in the spirit of the original arrangement. Still follow the chord charges as before but do different things with it. So if the original just has pounding root notes you could keep the root on Beats 1 and 3 but play octaves for 2 and 4. Or Back it off and only play on 1 and 3 to leave space and give more room to build. Then in bar 3 go back to playing all the notes. Depending on the song, behind a solo that builds up as it goes I’m a big fan of simplifying the original bass line for the first 2 or 4 bars, then getting back to where it was, then adding octaves, and then going to a walking bass part with octave shifts, like Jack Bruce did with Cream. It’s important to approach it still as a bass line where the rhythm is the vital element. So jumping up the neck is not a solo, it’s just a higher bass line. If the guitar solo is high don’t be scared of playing the normal bass part up an octave for some of it. The kick drums are still pounding the low end so let the bass move up as the guitar does. Repeating a bar in a higher octave works really well too. So if you are pounding the crotchets with AAGGF#F#EE in bar one, then in bar 2 play it identically but an octave up in bar 2, then down again in 3, and then up an octave BUT also change something in bar 4. If it fits playing it in reverse keeps the structure for the rhythm but also makes it more interesting to the listener. JS Bach wrote the best bass parts in history. Like mini tunes under the melody that elevated the main tune to greatness. I swear Jack Bruce must have listened to his stuff! Tone. Something I’ve discovered over the years is that a mid heavy tone, like a P bass instead of a J tends to work better. Theres a fatness that helps fill the tone out automatically. I’ve got a massive collection of 3 piece live albums and the P bass or PJ seems to rule above all. Theres a lot of flatwound use too, if the player is a pick user. John Deacon’s tone is amazing for it. Have a quick listen to the live version of One Vision live at Wembley. Theres a YT version that only shows JD’s cameras. It’s so fat! P with flats and a pick is the basic bit, but pay attention when the rest of the band have backed off a lot… the tone is actually a bit unpleasant. It’s very mid heavy and has farty drive going on. None of that ice pick Darkglass tone, it’s a wide frequency fartiness that sounds horrible on its own and fantastic in the mix. It’s quite similar to the old Cream live album in that respect. I use a Catalinbread SFT pedal to get that farty drive. I never use it in the house when playing alone as it sounds horrible! 😂 But even just with drums and nothing else, something magical happens and I can’t hear fart, I can only hear fatness and harmonic richness. A different approach is the dUg / Entwhistle / Sheehan split tone, mixing clean and dirt. It can sound great, but it’s also really easy to make it sound like ar$e. The issue is getting the clean portion of the tone to decay at the same rate as the driven part, and that means dialling in compression on the clean to match the natural compression of the drive. Overall though, build the band tone from the bottom. Drums first, then bass, then guitar. Then it will still sound full when the guitar is soloing. If the entire tone is built on the guitar and everything else has fit round it, then the band tone loses all weight during solos. But despite all this… enjoy the space of a 3 piece! A wall of noise gets tiring for an audience. So many bands these days seem to ignore dynamics. Have quiet bits, loud bits, thick bits, thin bits etc etc. The average punter will notice that sort of variation far quicker than anything else and it will keep them interested. Otis Day and the Knights had it right….” A little bit softer now, a little bit softer now…… a little bit louder now….” Anyway, I hope that helps a bit!
    5 points
  16. The only problem with Andertons is they keep a list of all the things you've bought over the years... I'm terrified the wife may find it one day...
    5 points
  17. Carvin AC40F fret less bass,in really good condition with original G&G tweed case and strung with a set of la Bella flats,some light scratches on the back,but in good condition in general,can post for £15 All Carvin instruments are hand made at their facilitues in San Diego, California. What's more, there are no Standard and Custom instruments. All of them are Custom Made using only the best tonewoods and parts. You can choose from a lot of different bass models and then lots of different options such as woods for the body, neck and fingerboard, finshes, exotic tops, colours, pickups, electronics and more. The amazing part is that you can get your dream bass in just 8 weeks since you place your order through us. This Carvin AC40f is an original design by this Californian brand and has been in their catalog for years. It comes to fill the gap between the electric and the acoustic bass, offering some interesting features over a traditional acoustic bass such as: - Slim body (easier to play and carry around) - Full 2 octave neck with unrestricted access to the highest notes. - Feedback free operation - Effective "plugged in" acoustic sound that will fit into a lot of different styles of music. - Ultra low weight (less than 4 kg) This is the fretless 4 string model without lines on the fingerboard (side dots are included). It is incredibly easy to play and it sounds just great. The Black nylon tape strings feel smooth and are easy on intonation too.
    4 points
  18. Nice bass but that price is eye-watering! Someone could've got these two and still have nearly £8,000 left over :-
    4 points
  19. Putting up this gorgeous '73 Mustang bass for sale (for what I paid for it around six months ago). Sounds and plays beautifully with wonderfully vibrant burst and chocolatey rosewood board. Superb condition for a 50 year old bass with lots of little surface indentations but no nasty dings. Wearing La Bella Mustang flats. Comes with new Fender padded short scale gigbag. £2750 collected from SW13 London or post at cost, as agreed with the buyer.
    4 points
  20. When you start a thread with "not feeling it" with IEM's then all those people who don't like them will jump in, and that's what happened. A lot of the comments here I would attribute to poorly fitting IEM's or ones where the sound in their ears hasn't been sorted properly. @Al Krow asked if there is a 'halfway house' the answer is no, if your in ears fit properly they should cut the outside sound to almost inaudible. The whole point is to cut out all the distorted unbalanced sound mess you get on stage and only hear a studio quality mix in you ears. If you can't get isolation or a good mix you aren't doing it properly and you won't like it. People can and do use in-ears half in and half out so they can hear the on-stage sound but that just increases the sound level and the in-ear sound from the buds is nasty and tinny because they aren't sealed. We've even had people who only put them in one ear. Honestly can you remember seeing a major touring band who don't use in-ears. Do you think every single band are just going through the motions or are 'just not feeling it' when they are closing the main stage at Glastonbury (other large events are available) All the excitement coming from the crowd is still there, all the excitement of playing your music and seeing the response still happens, you are still doing the thing that makes all those people have a great time. I'm not pretending there are no down sides to in ears, it takes time to get used to them. Longer for some than others. It takes as much effort to set up properly as any new skill, you have to put in the miles. If you go wired then you are tethered. It starts feeling very different and 'wrong' but ends up being a new normal. On the plus side you won't lose your hearing, your band will sound better, you will play better, your audiences will have a better time. I don't want to invalidate anyone's personal experience, we all like loud sounds, plugging our first bass amp in and turning it up to maximum is a great experience and it is exciting and adrenaline pumping but going out night after night without hearing protection is going to damage your hearing, limit your experience of music and in the end give you a sense of isolation from friends and family and ultimately life as you hearing fades and the tinnitus rises. Choose wisely.
    4 points
  21. You cant be serious. Love Sexy,, Diamonds and Pearls, The Gold Experience were great albums. and his live music was just.... He can be hit and miss but so are our ears as listeners. The guy didnt have to have chart toppers to be probably the best musician of all time. Putting lyrics like "We can stroll the mezzanine, buy some dirty magazines" then talk about eating ice cream. I just think thats so clever. A guy that played 27 instruments should have every musician in the worlds respect. Im never usually a fanboy of anyone but when it comes to Prince. Well its Prince.
    4 points
  22. I offer here my high-end bass Ozellman 6 Custom from Unicorn. The basses by Christian Olsson from Sweden are top notch and world class. Selected woods, which are prepared for use over a long period of time and finished by hand. All components are of the highest quality. Specs: - 6 strings, 34" scale length - Mahogany body - Figured Ovangkol top - Maple / Amaranth neck - Maccassar fingerboard - Unicornbass Custom Single Coils - True Passive Electronic - Weight only 4.1 kg - Built 2020 / 2021 The playability and ergonomics are first class, string action is super flat without the strings buzzing. The sound is cultivated and homogeneous across the entire fingerboard and very present and almost three-dimensional in the band context and in the mix. A bass of superlatives. The condition of the bass is flawless except for a small spot on the body "edge", which is barely noticeable or only noticeable in the right light and with a close look (see explicit picture). Nevertheless, it should be mentioned here and already taken into account in the price. Original price 7.250 € my price 4.700 €
    3 points
  23. For Record Store Day today me and my son Joe went to Casbah Records in Greenwich, it was opening at 9am, we got there at 8:50 and there was quite a queue (see pics), got into the shop at about 10:30 and luckily got what I wanted, a copy of Ian Hunter's new album "DEFIANCE PART 2 - FICTION". It was a tad chilly in London this morning and I was glad to get back home !! 🥶😂 Anyone else buy anything for this years RSD ? 😃 John
    3 points
  24. This iteration of The Pretenders really did it for me. The whole of the first album hit the spot in all sorts of ways.
    3 points
  25. Harley Benton power board (fully isolated multi volt PSU built in). Top row are always on, the three on the top left are my drive pedals controlled by the Joyo LS-2 clone. Parametric and compressor feeding big fat round bass to one channel and the Thruster sending filth to the other, they're blended and switched on and off by the Orthos. The rest just run right to left as you see them.
    3 points
  26. Not sure what he might say. I could probably ask him. Here's a pic from a few years ago, that's me at the back on the left sitting on the vintage Marshall playing a few licks on his '59 Les Paul "Carmelita", and Joe B himself playing rhythm for me on a '58 Les Paul previously owned by Mick Ralphs of Bad Company. Rob
    3 points
  27. The drummer controls *everything*. If he can’t, it’s time to get one who can.
    3 points
  28. Alternatively, seeing as my 61P was sold, you could just buy the Pino and have more than £18k left over. You've just saved another £10k! I should add that my advice isn't underwritten by the FSA.
    3 points
  29. Here's the inevitable video demo 😉 I injured my left hand a few weeks ago, so my playing is a bit sloppy. I just don't have enough strength in my fingers yet. But the video does give a good enough idea how the FV-12 sounds. 😉
    3 points
  30. Now was the time to make a decision about the "armpit" in the body. On my previous (long scale) Flying V Bass builds I had used and extra part in the armpit to allow the bridge to be as far back as possible. This would keep the original V shape visually in tact. And my original plan for this bass was to do exactly the same. I was going to use 24 ferrules for the 12 string through body attachment. I figured since it is a short scale bass it was not really a problem to have the bridge a bit away from the edge. And I had my doubts about the strength of the wood with all the holes that would have to be drilled quite close to each other. With all the string pull it might snap a chunk off? And the binding would ba a quite complex affair. One part would have to follow the original V shape and the other would have to follow the black part. So after some restless nights I decided not to used the extra part. I routed the binding channel (sorry no pics) and glued the pearloid binding in https://www.brooksbassguitars.com/uploads/1/3/3/7/13376708/brooks-fv-12-qm-binding-glued-in_orig.jpeg Drilled the output hole for the Telecaster style cup And holes for the potentiometers Holes for the bridge screws Time to stain the bass! First I did a yellow stain all over. I really like the korina with the yellow stain. But my customer wanted a mahogany colour for the back and sides. Then took to the burst. I used a light red stain for the trabsition to yellow. Plus a darker red stain for the outline. After a few layers of clear lacquer:
    3 points
  31. The beautiful set of bookmatched quilted maple that I found at Holz Faszination was ready to be glued onto the body. Then routed along the mdf template to give it the body shape Looks like a Flying V already! Shaped the heel area. Routed the controls cavity form the back Routed the pickup cavities Not the neatest routing job I've ever done. But I was going to use pickup rings so I didn't mind that much. Wetted the top with a damp rag to make the quilt pop.
    3 points
  32. Such a risk only owning the one though... Think how much easier you'd sleep having two!!
    3 points
  33. Had a similar DHL fiasco about two years ago. I bought a P Bass via Andertons, ordered on a Satuday morning, delivery Monday, everything to do with Andertons went smoothly, eg order and delivery confirmation etc. Monday comes....Nothing! Phoned Andertons, they confimed it had left via DHL, phoned DHL, "oh sorry we tried to deliver, but there was nobody in", "Lies said I, I've been waiting in, no one has been here." "Oh", she said, "Let me check the system, ah it's in our delivery centre in Exeter, it will definitely be with you on Wednesday." Wednesday comes... Nowt! Rang them again, to be told that they'd sent it back to Andertons. Phoned them, told them not to resend via DHL as they were useless IIRC, it ended up delivered by DPD.
    3 points
  34. I have advised Andertons that in the event of my death they must not let my wife sell my basses for what I told her id paid for them.
    3 points
  35. Maybe this will do it: The arrows move left and right on the beat. The led's flash. There is a sound beat which can change to a voice that counts (in chinese if he is really struggling). There is a volume control with headphone ouput (which I am sure would connect to the aux input of a 500w amp and cab just for getting the point over).
    2 points
  36. Maybe at the time, you should have recruited a Drummer who could keep time. You could have avoided all those wasted years. In hindsight, maybe you should have got him "A Simple Metronome With A Big Flashing Light"
    2 points
  37. It’d be good if it stays in the UK. I suspect it will have collectors worldwide scrambling for funds.
    2 points
  38. After lots of layers of clear and lots of sanding in between I could apply the decals. Sanded it with 800 grits > 1200 grit > 2000 grit > 3000 grit. And then polished it I painted the cavities with shielding paint. But I'm horrible at soldering. So I had my good friend Sjoerd take care of the wiring for me. He did a very neat job.
    2 points
  39. I can maybe make one for others if they want one. The standard of this one wasn’t my best work, I wanted to make it out of oak but my normal wood shop has stopped sells shorter lengths so I just got some basic wood from Wickes. I only had a day to make it while I was WFH in my lunchtime!!!
    2 points
  40. You need to paint it black though...
    2 points
  41. I'm trying to find if Snugs will make something moulded that will work with Sennheiser IE100's, still waiting for them to get back to me but I'll let you know if they will.
    2 points
  42. P.S. A guitarist friend of mine played in a band where the bassist had a Ric. 18 months or so ago, I said to the guitarist friend “Rickenbackers look weird and sound rubbish.” Somehow I now own one (well not that much of mystery - I walked into Guitar Guitar with a credit card and bought it). I think it looks great and sounds great. Maybe this thread is about 18 months too late for me to fully participate.😀
    2 points
  43. If ya happy with 1/4" Jack Out, SH Zoom B1 Four (or B1on) @ £50ish Tuner, 50 Patches of upto 5 Effects, Amp/Cab Sims, 30 Sec Looper, Drum Machine... and ToneLib to Edit the patches. If you just want the bassics!.. get a SH Behringer BDI21. SansAmp-a-like with DI XLR out... £25ish
    2 points
  44. While the glue malarkey kafuffle was ongoing, I cracked on with the sides. First job, trim the kerfing back with a spokeshave. The best job in luthiery. It's like popping bubble wrap but much better The back is dome shaped, with a radius of 12 feet. So that same radius needs to be sanded into the sides & kerfing. Straightforward to do on the radius dish, even if it takes quite a while. Any time I'm doing sanding I try to do it inside my hi-tech sanding cubicle. A quick n easy downdraft table. Or sidedraft I suppose. Works a treat. Next I need to carve channels through the kerfing so that the braces sit nicely inside. I used a dremel, again in my sidedraft cubicle. (I must get that patented, pronto). The idea being that the ends of the braces go into the kerfing, like this: The gaps will get filled with epoxy when the back gets glued onto the sides. And here they are, not glued yet as there's another job to do first......(ooh mysterious!)
    2 points
  45. I ordered a deeply obscure pickup from them. They told me upfront that it would take yonks. It took yonks, but they kept me informed. You cannot ask more than that.
    2 points
  46. I've always had a good experience buying stuff from Andertons. I'm a fan.
    2 points
  47. More drive and more considered note choices. IME it's as much what you play as how you sound.
    2 points
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