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LukeFRC

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by LukeFRC

  1. yes! I'll have it!
  2. some silver series stuff was PAF , the most dreadful construction material known to man - oh it sounds fine on the bass, just don't try and strip it for a refinish....
  3. [quote name='discreet' timestamp='1392243170' post='2366494'] I've heard that particular bass is... not bad. I'm in London though, so... [/quote] denied by the length of the M1 !
  4. [quote name='discreet' timestamp='1392242944' post='2366483'] I've not owned or played a Yamaha bass [/quote] really? come have a shot on my bb1200
  5. [color=#282828][font=helvetica, arial, sans-serif]"So.....that's me and I am looking for you guys to tell me whether Yamaha basses are the world's best kept secret. "[/font][/color] [color=#282828][font=helvetica, arial, sans-serif]well they were up to 9:52 when you started this thread[/font][/color]
  6. if by cut through you mean a middy tone - then Eq is your friend. if you cut through you mean "be heard" got over to your guitarists and tell each of them to cut the bass on their amps....
  7. Well I disagree that all class D stuff is the same - we covered that earlier in the thread- comparing the inside of say your Vivid amp or a modern tecamp puma with a powersoft power amp and you would see the massive difference! I think what it is is that a lot of companies are using the same modules two or 3 to build the power amp and supply section of their amps. I'ld also say that there are quite a few companies giving a "full range pure" sound to their amps - Glockenklang probably being the biggest, the review of their Blue Soul head in Bass Gear Magazine showed a ridiculously flat response.
  8. [quote name='JapanAxe' timestamp='1392162346' post='2365623'] Regarding that much-vaunted OOMPH: I had an Ashdown rig with mahoosive toroidal mains transformer and traditional solid-state power section. Every note came with a free OOMPH, but it wasn't until I got my first Class D / Neodymium setup that I realised that OOMPH had been denying me the subtlety, growl, and sweetness that I should have been getting. [/quote] I would suspect that it had more to do going from a mahoosive ashdown rig to the Genz Benz/TC with barefaced cabs than with the power supply!
  9. [quote name='TomRichards' timestamp='1392160344' post='2365589'] I believe Vivid Amps does (vividamps.com) [b]Their approach is to make an amp that doesn't color your tone or signal at all,[/b] and reproduce the full range. The new VB1500 was designed using lots of comments from this forum but ultimately around their approach that bass players will use their bass or an outboard eq in many cases to get their "sound". So they try not to do anything to that. Fuchs has a new Bass Bruiser Jr. which has a valve pre and Class D power section. Also knows what they are doing. Getting power without weight, cutting down on some of the heat, but keeping the warmth and life of tubes (fuchsaudiotechnology.com) Check out both if you want to see what they are doing with Class D. I will agree though, lots of new Class D stuff out there. The Peavey one with the chicken head knobs is a good little amp and has some nice retro touch with the knobs. I saw a bunch of stuff at NAMM this year, everyone pretty equal. Nice stuff by Tecamp, Phil Jones added a new one, and even Fender had some decent additions. [/quote] isn't that just a power amp with a few extra knobs then? I think you've hit something in that last para - "everyone pretty equal" - it's all the same few class D modules with 101 different manufacturers putting them in their own boxes with their own power amps - looking at photos of the newer tecamp stuff it's gone back a few steps compared to the earlier powersoft pumas in terms of what's under the hood... not saying they don't sound nice but....
  10. a dome with reflective walls.... oh dear. I had similar practicing problems in a room in the arches of a church roof, everything that wasn't stone or wood floor was glass! Personally if it's just for practicing I would go one cab that you can tilt back to point at you. More than one source the more random reflections will go everywhere...
  11. I'm all for cheap stuff - but cheap metal parts are the worst - I would rather have the worst bits of plywood in the world - a neck that splintered and frets in the wrong places than the internal anguish and frustration that stripped screw heads cause me.
  12. given how long that must have taken and my estimated cost of that... how do the guys at alpher manage to afford to eat?
  13. [quote][color=#282828][font=helvetica, arial, sans-serif]The EBS rig is serving me fine as such, but I would like some more options with placement (rehearsal room issues), and also see if I could get a hold of an actual two channel amp (t switch between fretted/fretless playing.[/font][/color][/quote] technically what are the issues in the rehearsal room and how would having more options with placement make them better? and... you've got a micro bass 11 in your sig - with that having 2 channels, and your amp having another one- you've already kinda got 3 channels... Also- I can understand EBS and Glock being in the same territory amp wise - but TC is very very different.....
  14. [quote name='ahpook' timestamp='1392066939' post='2364376'] Daddy, what did you do in the loudness war ? [/quote] This is your father's [i]Dynamics saber [/i]Luke, a more elegant musical tool from a more civilised age....
  15. I've been looking for smaller cabs than a 4x10 and all I can find is 4x10's... I think if I were upgrading, given the choice I would try something other than ashdown.
  16. I've played a couple - really really nice basses. I dunno what else to say really, the two I've played have been similar to a super jazz in sound and feel. They use really nice woods, I saw a stupidly light ash body there and an awesome wenge neck, Chris really does love his fancy wood tops! They're nice pups and active circuits made in the UK, and the woodwork is really good, good attention to detail etc. No screws used I think all Hex Bolts. When I visited Chris had his Sadowsky and Valenti kicking around and I had a play on all of them, you couldn't really say any were "worse" than the others - just built to different goals. Part of me though doesn't know what to say about them, they are good high end basses and great people - what I think makes me like them is my own bass sat in the other room. I moved down to leeds about a year ago and had a warwick that was really almost unplayable cos of fret wear - well new city you don't know the cow boy techs from the really good ones and asked on Basschat for recommendations, I don't even think Alpher got mentioned but I found another thread where I found these guys in Saltaire who were making basses... going on the basis that if you could build a bass you would be able to set the frets up better I got talking to them.... My warwick is one of the greatest playing basses I've played, the action could go stupidly low (if I wanted it) and it's just such a top quality job. Highly recommended. Oh and they have their own brand strings I like too. Need to buy a few more packets of them.
  17. [quote name='owen' timestamp='1391955626' post='2362935'] So, in the spirit of this thread, who can do the DSP for us tech-numpties? [/quote] some power amps have DSP built in with handy visual interfaces for the PC - it wouldn't surprise me if given the plans for a cab and the graphs of what it will do you could work it out yourself...
  18. either - value it on the value of some its parts... or by who put it together - theres some folk on here you would trust to come up with the good stuff
  19. [quote name='Kev' timestamp='1391851569' post='2361935'] help me avoid eBay chaps and chappesses. [/quote]
  20. I haven't been able to find it for months.
  21. I've had a few fender precisions down the years and played even more of them. The '70s Yamaha BB1200 I picked up almost by accident knocks the socks off them - it can kinda do precisiony - but it's so so so much more musical an instrument.
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