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Everything posted by mcnach
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Hell Is Other People (who know you play in a band)
mcnach replied to Monkey Steve's topic in General Discussion
nice selection -
PJ bass: isolating the P pickup for 'real' Precision sounds...
mcnach replied to mcnach's topic in General Discussion
Since I seem to only split the humbucker when using the P alone... I think VVT + pickup switch and ignore coilsplit might be the thing to do... -
Hell Is Other People (who know you play in a band)
mcnach replied to Monkey Steve's topic in General Discussion
Everyone at works know about one of my bands at least. Some even regularly show up at our local gigs following us on facebook. For a time, our trumpet player was a colleague. Why would they laugh at me? The fact that I have the key to the poisons cabinet and access a wide range of acids and sharp implements has nothing to do with it 😛 -
That is true. Maintaining them interested, however, generally is a good indication of some talent. Whether that's interesting to you or not is entirely another matter. I have come across some successful youtube channels talking about the most inane things... the one thing they undoubtedly had was an ability to present and be entertainers. Which is why they can often make a living out of it. You seem to dismiss that as non-talent. I really don't get what your beef is.
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Nice! It must have been a fun session (or at least it has great potential to be!)
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I can't believe Scott's talent, on bass and otherwise, is put in question here... what next? Is the Sun warm?
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??? what does that even mean???
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PJ bass: isolating the P pickup for 'real' Precision sounds...
mcnach replied to mcnach's topic in General Discussion
hmmm... I have to look closely. If it can be used to bypass the pickup as well as remove itself from the circuit when set at 0... it could be useful, and no extra switches added to the front of the bass. -
PJ bass: isolating the P pickup for 'real' Precision sounds...
mcnach replied to mcnach's topic in General Discussion
I'm not concerned with the balance (although I do want to keep the ability, so VVT is still in my mind), but about removing the bridge pickup and its volume potentiometer from the circuit, as it affects the sound of the P pickup even when fully turned down. -
I have a Maruszczyk Jake, in P/JJ configuration, passive, with VVT controls. The JJ humbucker at the bridge can be coil-split, the switch is on the tone control (push/pull). The Precision sound is not quite there, although it gets a lot closer when I split the JJ. I am thinking it could be nice to isolate the P for 'maximum Precision' on this bass. At first I thought I would install a miniswitch to bypass the bridge pickup (pickup AND volume pot, of course). But then I started thinking that maybe a VVT *plus* a pickup switch would be a good option too. I'm sure I've seen that wiring before. What do you think would be the best option? A bypass seems like the simplest route to get the result I want: an easily selectable way to get just the precision pickup (with the usual V and T controls).
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That's how it starts... In a month you'd be wearing Threatin T-shirts and posters all over your bedroom...
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??? I see quite a few pictures, and they look decent.
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Some good points here but there's a recurrent theme of "and the music is crap". Ok, you don't like it, we get it. But it's not very different from other stuff that is popular enough so there will be likely enough people who do like it. Calling it crap just makes you look a little... snobbish? I don't know what's the right word. No, I would not buy a ticket, but that's a separate matter.
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I have a passive Maruszczyk Jake, a P/JJ. The double J pickup can be split by pulling on the tone knob. The controls are VVT. With the P volume all the way open, and the JJ volume all the way off, splitting the JJ with the switch makes a very noticeable change to the sound, even if the JJ pickup is 'off'. I keep toying with the idea of installing a switch to isolate the bridge pickup entirely... it's a great bass, but I don't quite get the Precision sound I want out of it (it has other really good sounds ) Maybe I should just go ahead and do it..
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That's the typical way to do it, yes
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Yes, of course. How to do it will depend on the circuit you have... If the pickups are blended first and the signal fed into the preamp, a switch could do that. Some preamps already allow each pickup to be used independently... I have no idea how the Fender one is designed.
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Sure there will be a change... but if you take 1000 random Precisions, there will be enough variability there that cutting a bit of wood in one is not going to make it jump outside the "Precision population".
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The problem with a typical PJ is that the J pickup & potentiometer is in the circuit even when you turn it down entirely, and changes the way the "P"sounds. But one can rewire so that both pickups are isolated, and it'll sound more like a Precision... because it will be one. That's why I consider a P and a PJ distinct (somewhat similar, but distinct) and not because of the range of sounds that having two pickups give you.
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I suspect in reality it would be something cyclical, and/or involve a big shake-up and reshape of civilisation as we know it (through war or disease, most likely)... either way, the next few centuries look dire. Sometimes I wish we had some kind of alien invasion or something. It seems it's the only way humans would ever pull up together: find other beings to blame things on and turn into an enemy. Only half joking there...
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Same here. I don't see the problem. Bear in mind as well that we're talking... electric bass guitars, of all instruments. What do I mean by that? Several things: 1. We're not talking about basics like food and shelter. For the vast majority in this forum, electric basses are a bit of a luxury, something we could live without. For those who actually make a living out of playing electric bass... 2. Nobody needs to buy a $5000 electric bass. You could spend a tenth of that in a very decent quality instrument. If you push me, you could even spend £100 and a little effort to get a bass that will do the job nicely and allow you to earn money with it. If you had to. So nobody is forced to buy that $5000 if it'sbeyond their means. 3. Electric basses! Be glad you're not playing a tuba instead! There's no real "cheap but nice" tubas out there.