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Everything posted by Chiliwailer
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Owen bought from me recently, quick and friendly comms and payment. Cheers pal.
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Elephant in the room - I feel like a bit of ¥#€@ selling this for £40 Ono, but I’ve also seen them sell for more than this. It’s here if you want it, £40 ono. Albeit, comes from a 1973 P Bass. Has all the mojo of a vintage Fender part, that you just can’t get with a modern neck shim 😉 Selling as I’m having a clear out. Postage via Royal Mail at cost. Thanks.
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Boxed and in perfect working order. Really lovely pickup. Selling as I’m having a clear out, gone back to my original 1995 pickup as I’m nostalgic, though this pickup was far more balanced, very much enjoyed using it, sweet tone. I’ve also had another one in my old shorty Ray, these pickups can be modded to a 4 wire option, for series/parallel/single, if you’d want to. Postage via Royal Mail at cost. Thanks.
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Almost, but not quite, looks like a Mike Lull bolt on style - I wonder if he worked on the bass in Seattle? Gave it a lighter body? Or someone copied his style perhaps.
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Vintage stingray clone active 3 band with buzz
Chiliwailer replied to Geek99's topic in Repairs and Technical
Why’s that? Just wondering. Assuming that if it’s due to the distance, you could either just use the supplied one with the 2 band (mount the output on the plate) or extend the wires for the jack on the new supplied one, so it reaches the original socket position (and have a dummy pot on the plate for aesthetics). -
Vintage stingray clone active 3 band with buzz
Chiliwailer replied to Geek99's topic in Repairs and Technical
Also, if you haven’t already, it may be worth checking the earth is still connected to under the bridge (downtown….😊) -
Vintage stingray clone active 3 band with buzz
Chiliwailer replied to Geek99's topic in Repairs and Technical
The Retrovibe Stinger is about £75 new, not tried one though. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/281890345393?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-127632-2357-0&ssspo=gzZuqd4kSaq&sssrc=4429486&ssuid=DHJFo4GVQzS&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY The plates on an EB Ray are the same size for a 2 and 3 band. The difference is the output jack socket is on the side of the body on a 3 band EQ, not on the plate like a 2 band. The EB 2 and 3 band EQs have the pots attached to the circuit board, other pre amps are usually non mounted like that. -
If your soldering is fine, perhaps swap out the neck pickup pot, see how it is then. edit - or if you think it’s out of phase, I wonder if the white and black wires need swapping over, maybe the rewinding put them back the wrong way. Just a guess.
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Good point and can be the case; my personal experience with vintage basses and guitars is different on the whole. I worked in vintage guitar shops in London over a span of many years. There were the odd vintage dogs, but not actually that many in ratio to those I played/sold. Like any bass, there will be some that do the rounds (like a SB Lull P Bass that was on here a few times that I took a chance on and quickly sold on!). The vast majority were just average I.e. no ‘better’ than any other good instrument, though perhaps with a feel or mystic that draws us in. Like Clive Brown once said to me ‘People wrongly think the old ones are better, like they are made with magic pixie dust!’ The others, and fewer amount, were really outstanding, perhaps being a combo of years of use, great wood, and tons of mojo. Just from my personal experience I really don’t think it’s just the dogs that are doing the rounds, more that people work out a vintage bass isn’t as special as they thought, or that the bass is different to what they had imagined or expected when buying with their eyes or dreams. That said, I totally get why people love the vintage vibe nonetheless. My AVRI with a Fralin pup is just as good a player and tone as the very good and near mint ‘66 P Bass I sold when my wife needed a new car. That was my last, of many, vintage basses over the years- it just wasn’t worth the extra £s for me when we needed it back. I saw that bass passed round 3 times within 2 years but it was a great bass. If I was wealthy I’d like another early Fender bass purely for the fun of it, but that’d be my only reason given the more than good enough quality of my AVRI and CS Fender basses. YMMV 😊
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The itch gets scratched… then the reality of the cost sets in? Was often my dilemma anyway when owning old gear and the prices went north.
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Back then they used the same pup for the 57/62 reissues.
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Here’s another page that introduces the new range, FYI @Basszilla https://fcat.no/catalogs/FMIC/Fender.FMIC.1995.Frontline.Vol.16.Summer.1995.pdf
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This picture is from one of the ‘96 Fender Frontline magazines. States a vintage pup. https://fcat.no
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Neck looks legit, especially with those stamps on the heal. You’re right about the logo, not a chance it’s legit.
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I know they often had 2 extra holes in the neck pocket, but there’s a fair few more there - worst case scenario is it’s an old refin that kept the stamps, it happens. I may be wrong, hard to always see in pics. edit - if resprayed, and that’s an if, it could have been put back to the original colour as a stamp seems to go just over the paint, as it would have.
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The code is correct for a maple board ‘77 P Bass neck. So if the code is Fender legit, then it must of had a new decal. Is the body original finish? Sometimes matching headstocks were done on a refin.
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Any pot codes @Bagman ?
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Now you got me thinking about starting a soul/RnB Bluegrass band and calling it Dirty Barn Dancing 😊