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Beer of the Bass

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Posts posted by Beer of the Bass

  1. My band are talking about a potential gig in the spring - not confirmed yet but it's going to involve a plane journey, and the gig itself is doing several sets a day outdoors over three days. If the gig is confirmed, I'm thinking about picking up a cheap laminated bass as a knockabout travelling/outdoor bass for the situations where I don't want to use my old German flatback. It would also be handy for busking in dodgy weather.
    So, what I'm wondering is whether people would trust the styrofoam type cases (as supplied with Gear4Music basses, for example) when flying with a laminated bass. I've not seen this type of case in the flesh, so it's hard to be sure.

  2. The Sunn guitars and basses were in all the home shopping catalogues in the 80's when I was a kid, so they're probably the equivalent of a squire affinity or similar in terms of their value at the time. At £400, I'd run a mile.

  3. From experience with the torch cleaning files, they're fine for minor shaping on a plastic nut (like lowering existing slots or changing string gauge), but a bit useless if making a nut from an unslotted blank, particularly with harder materials like bone. So they're useful to have around, but don't totally replace the fancy nut files.

  4. You may find you're OK even with individual pole pieces. Rickenbacker toasters for both guitar and bass have six polepieces under the cover. I've got a Kent Armstrong copy of one on my four string, and have no problems with string balance. How the tone of a guitar humbucker would translate to bass would take some guesswork, however.

  5. I'm not really an expert, but the shape of the body around the heel suggests it is blockless (i.e with the ribs set directly into the neck, rather than using a neck block). Along with the hatpeg tuners and decorative purfling at the heel, this often a characteristic of older Germanic basses - around the late 19th to early 20th century would be a rough estimate. With a decent ebony board fitted and the cracks sorted, it'll probably be a good sounding bass, the sort of thing a lot of working jazzers seem to use. A full restoration on any bass tends to be expensive, to the point of exceeding the value of lower end basses, but it may be possible to get it into a playable state with less than that.

  6. I played a 12 1/2 pound bass for years, and am now using one weighing just a tad over 9 1/2 pounds, which is much more bearable. 12 1/2lbs gives me shoulder problems, 9 1/2lbs doesn't. I think 8lbs or less is light, 9-10 is medium and anything over 10 is heavy.
    Come to think of it, my dog weighs 10 1/2 lbs, so I should set up a big set of scales like they use for witches in The Holy Grail. Anything weighing the same or less than the dog would be OK!

  7. I wonder how much use it would be, as our perception of tension varies a lot with the flexibility and elasticity of the string as well as absolute tension. As an example, Thomastik Dominants feel about as stiff to play as Spiro Mittels, but I am told the measured tension is lower.

  8. Double bass looks good, and that's sometimes the most important thing in busking. You need something that makes people stop and have a look, and only then will they check out the actual music. On that basis, a bass balaika would work well too! I'm busking with a singer/guitarist, portable drum kit and occasional fiddle in Edinburgh through the festival. We amplify the singer a little and everything else goes unamped. The best way to make money out of it seems to be to have CDs available at £5 a time. They make a big difference to how much we can bring in, and it's a good way to get our stuff out there.

  9. The idea that there is a "correct volume" for the cavity which must not be deviated from is bizarre. It might make sense on a true acoustic instrument, but not on a chambered solid body. Why not just come clean and say that the lack of an access panel is for aesthetics? It is an interesting looking instrument though, and someone out there may love it.

  10. Not positive this time, I'm afraid. I bought a Pignose amp from Graham on the 5th August. On the 11th, he messaged me with "Hello fella, sorry for the lateness the Amp should be there in a day ir two ". I then messaged him two more times over the next few days, as there was still no sign of the amp. He spun me a story that he was away from home camping and didn't have the tracking details with him, yet when the amp arrived, the label clearly showed he hadn't actually dispatched it until the 16th. So why did he imply that he had already posted it on the 11th?
    When the amp arrived, the input jack was intermittent and crackly and the power jack appears to either be missing or broken. The description did not mention either of these things. I am going to hang on to the amp and fix these, but there is no way I would deal with this guy again.
    I hate having to post negatively, but the feedback system is worthless if I don't.

  11. [quote name='chrisd24' post='1339062' date='Aug 13 2011, 08:18 PM']Out of curiosity what does an alnico magnet look like?[/quote]

    It's a dullish grey metallic looking material. On alnico Fender pickups, the polepieces themselves are the magnets - there is no bar magnet on the bottom.

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