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Linus27

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by Linus27

  1. Gorgeous looking basses. I'm considering getting one of these as options on buying an unlined fretless bass these days is so slim. You cant buy an unlined fretless Jazz and a fretless Stingray is impossible to find so it looks like getting hold of one of these is my only option.
  2. I think Sting's sunburst Precision would be worth a small fortune. Pino's fretless Stingray and maybe a Mark King's Alembic as well.
  3. I don't understand the logic of buying the Mexican Precision and then sending it straight to your tech to totally change it. You are buying a bass that you don't like, otherwise you wouldn't be changing the bridge, pickups and tuners, plus changing it without knowing if you like it so already in your head you are not happy with it. Just buy the American Pro II, a US Precision as suggested or look at an alternative like the Lakland or Shuker.
  4. They also made them with matching coloured headstock with the Fender shaped headstock. I'd kill to get one of these in the red or blue.
  5. I believe this is the case and what I've been told on a few occasions when I was enquiring about this bass.
  6. I have one of these basses. Got it new around 87 and its probably the best Jazz bass I have owned. Its done hundreds of gigs, been on TV, recorded albums and is a gem of a bass. A couple of people here have played it and have loved it. I also have two necks for it, the original fretted and a fretless. Mine is thoroughly beaten up these days which just adds to the history of it. So this is what I know about the bass. The ESP 400 Series Jazz was made at the same factory as the Japanese Fender basses. I am led to believe that its exactly the same spec as a Japanese Fender but depending on what the production run is, it could end up with an ESP decal on the headstock, a Fender decal or I think one other. This probably explains why the headstock is identical to a Fender (as it is a Fender neck) and if you buy replacement Fender parts like neck plates, control plates, etc. the screws holes all line up. The bass is based on a Fender 1966 Jazz bass and explains the very thin neck. That's as much as I know about them apart from them being fantastic to play. Here a picture of mine at a gig. You can see its a bit beaten up. I also changed the pickups to Bart's which also sound fab.
  7. Apologies if this has been already mentioned or more likely I'm just being a numpty but I'm having problems with the search function. If I search for say Fender Precision and click on content titles only, I used to get threads but for some reason I now just get a mix of topics and a list of peoples conversations. Am I doing something wrong?
  8. I'm considering one of these as my backup but kind of holding back in case EBS, Ampeg or Ashdown release something similar.
  9. Interesting reading, thank you for posting. I'm thinking of getting either one of these, an Elf or the new Warwick Gnome as a back up and home practice rig. I think the BAM200 is the cheapest of the 3.
  10. *** Now Sold *** For sale is my 2012 Fender Jazz 1975 American Vintage Reissue Jazz. The bass plays beautifully and is in pretty much mint condition apart from some very very minor belt rash on the back which is not visible. Comes complete with ashtray covers, thumb rest, mutes and tools. These basses are no longer made and are getting hard to find so I think £1150 is a fair price considering the condition. Based in Camberley and any trial is welcome.
  11. Would love this but need to sell my Limelight Jazz first
  12. My home practise rig is an Ashdown Mi550 and Mi10 cab and I use a passive Fender Precision fretless. Been using this for months and months and even up to 15mins before rehearsal yesterday. I even double checked everything was working as it was the first rehearsal for a new project and wanted to check the input level on the amp was set and the EQ was sounding half decent. Once I had, I packed the gear up and headed to the quiet acoustic rehearsal. Set up and plugged my tuner in and nothing. I thought ok, maybe battery so I changed my battery and still nothing. The tuner came on but no signal being received from the bass. So I tuned by ear and plugged the bass into the amp and again nothing. The input needle on the Ashdown amp was not moving. So lots of checking cables and trying different cables and still nothing. So we plugged the acoustic guitar in and it worked. Tried the bass again and nothing. Plugged another bass in and nothing. Changed the battery in this other bass as it was active and it worked. Throughout the night I kept trying my passive bass but still nothing, dead as a dodo. Got home after rehearsal, set the rig up with same bass to try and work out what was happening and it all worked as it has for months and months. To add more confusion, when I left rehearsal, my car wouldn't start. It has a start button and I just have the keys in my pocket and press the button and off it starts. Has worked everytime for years. Last night though when I went to start, it wouldn't and the info screen told me to hold the keys by the start button and press the button to start the car. I have never seen this before but it seemed to work. I have no idea what was going on but it was very odd, especially with the bass.
  13. Hahaha brilliant although not really accurate from my experience but still funny.
  14. Still available and price reduced to £750 which includes shipping in the UK. Would also consider trades for the following, Fender Precision American Vintage Reissue 62 or 57 in Sunburst or White with cash your way. Fender Precision American Standard 2008 onwards (high mass bridge, lightweight Hipshot tuners and knurled chrome flat-top controls) in Sunburst or White with Rosewood neck. Fender American Performer Precision.
  15. I wonder if Ampeg are going to release any other new products or update any of the existing Portaflex range, for example the PF50 Valve head or the PF350/500/800 amps. I love my PF500 amp, it sounds amazing through my Barefaced 210 and I'm very tempted to upgrade to a PF800 at some point.
  16. I'm a gigging bassist and my current lineup is, Fender Jazz 1975 American Vintage Reissue with rounds Fender Precision 1970's Fretless with flats Fender Jazz 1966 Japanese Reissue with rounds Limelight Jazz 1960 Fretless Stack Knob with rounds I would like to purchase a fretted Fender American Precision and I might sell my Limelight Jazz.
  17. A normal person would suggest selling one to make it 12 but you and I know that is the most ridiculous suggestion ever. We all know that you only sell a bass because you are replacing it with another, you don't just sell a bass right
  18. Technically you only need 2 basses, a Precision and a Jazz. However, you really need a Stingray as well. Then you'll have every tonal palette covered. Oh, wait, but if your Precision has flats for the whole Motown vibe, then you're going to need another Precision with rounds so you can do punk, grunge and rock tone. Actually, you need a Fender Telecaster bass as that has a humbucker pickup and will sound different to anything else. While you're at it, you need a fretless as well and you might as well get a fretless Precision, Jazz and Stingray. Have I mentioned short scale basses, oh no. Ok, so you will also need a short scale bass for when you are older and your neck and shoulders are buggered. So to summarize, you need 1 x Precision with Flats 1 x Precision with Rounds 1 x Precision Fretless 1 x Jazz with Rounds 1 x Jazz Fretless 1 x Stingray 1 x Stingray Fretless 1 x Telecaster bass 1 x Mustang Short Scale So the answer is 9, you need 9 basses. I've used logic, a little bit of science and maybe a little bit of bias 😂
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