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Everything posted by chris_b
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I know someone using a Little Mark 800 through a single SC. He goes pretty loud and sounds good too.
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. . . . . . . . or you could just tilt the cab back?
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You don't want to buy a BB2. And you don't want to get a new one with 20% knocked off the price. You don't. Really.
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Bass started off with no amps at all for a good few hundred years, briefly moved to small amps for a few years and then big amps emerged for the lucky few who could afford roadies. That time passed and we are now back to small amps and the future looks like we're heading to no amps again. We've gone full circle and when the apocalypse happens and electricity gives out double basses will be king again. The guys who held on to their 810 cabs will be laughing, at least they'll have somewhere to live.
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Bridge To body screw hole stripped out
chris_b replied to nottswarwick's topic in Repairs and Technical
For the size of hole you are dealing with, matchsticks are big enough to force the screw to bite into the now reduced hole size. You really don't need to use glue either. -
Shame. Sounding good. Very tight.
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Nah. Just happy you got a result.
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I had AE112's for about 6 years and then a CN 212 for a couple more. If I ever move away from my Barefaced cabs Bergantino is where I'd be. I don't know there is a huge difference between the AE, CN and HDN cabs. Maybe the HDN's are the culmination of the tweeks that have been made to the previous models. I'd always go for several 112's, because they are flexible and give you modular set ups. I also have a bad back which is why I had to sell my CN212. I'm always looking for the lightest carry. Also check out Barefaced. My Super Compact and Super Midget make a world class sound and they are two of the lightest, loudest 112's I've heard. I briefly owned a D800 and used it with 2 Super Compacts. They made a great sound together, but I decided I preferred my Aguilar amps. I'm sure the Subway cabs would be an excellent choice. BF have a 20% off sale on their cabs until Monday.
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If you look at through the side slots on my Aguilar TH500 and AG700, you can see. . . . . . . virtually nothing! The ratio of stuff to space is about 50/50. Does anyone have any D class reliability issues these days? Not me. Anyone seen a pro touring PA system fail? Those FOH systems have been D class for many, many years. The PA companies who put together those systems wouldn't use anything unless it had the highest reliability imaginable. My valve amps were pretty good but the main ones, Marshall 100 watt and Mesa 400+, did fail on stage a couple of times over the years. I took my SS with a valve pre SVT3 to the repair shop for an MOT. The guy running the place said he'd never had one in for repair, but there were more than a dozen hire SVT's which had problems he needed to fix before they could go out again. SS amps hit a peak of reliability and it only got better with D class. Electrical components will never have 100% reliability in anything but the failure rate these days is miniscule, but that's what backups are for. Who has used their backup amp because of a problem with their main amp? Again, I haven't. Is anyone old enough to remember the TV repair man coming to your house to fix those big wooden cased TV's? Or taking your broken radio to the repair shop? We are are at a time of the highest reliability in anything electrical. So, to get back to the original comments. . . . . I don't see D class amps "regularly overheating". That's a generalisation that I don't believe.
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I haven't made a 110 work on a gig yet, but I've used a 112 quite often.
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Did this tech actually find a problem in this amp when he looked at it? I have never had an SS or D class amp overheat and some of them have been run pretty hard.
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You are a Jazz man, and you don't have a Jazz?!? But you do have a P bass that "you love". I think you probably have the right bass, but just want another. Bide your time. Save up and get a Jazz when you can afford both.
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Rhythm is about patterns. Get those patterns into your head and reading the dots becomes very easy. You don't read the letters in words, you recognise the patterns the letters make and you instantly know what the word is.
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Why is picking a band name so bloody hard?
chris_b replied to Newfoundfreedom's topic in General Discussion
In the old days, when you could drive past other gigs on the way to your gig, I was always amused to see Ken Dodd's Dad's Dog's Dead and Howlin' Wilf on posters. -
A great P bass and flats tone is down in the foundations rather than up in the attic. Mike Leech - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gr_eVcCAUXo Bob Babbitt - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0F9lh8TiSM&list=PLGOMddyl84XCYWEQnQxB9uwo3xDJj4VfW
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Email them and ask. You never know.
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Why is picking a band name so bloody hard?
chris_b replied to Newfoundfreedom's topic in General Discussion
I agree, the name is important and you have to have a graphic that's simple and instantly recognisable from a distance for the posters. -
Why is picking a band name so bloody hard?
chris_b replied to Newfoundfreedom's topic in General Discussion
My last cover band's name was so crap that I spent 8 years referring to it as Steve's band. And no, I'm not telling. -
Well . . . . . I met up with Pete, the guy who ran the other band in our school, on a gig with a band that I joined in 1986, via an ad in Melody Maker. He asked me to join his band. He introduced me to Robin, Tim, Pete, Jamie, Nigel and others. Nigel had a band with Dave and they had their own bands. I played with all 3. Roger, the drummer in 1986 band, hooked my up with Polly, Greg and later Steve (mentioned earlier) and Bernie . Playing with Robin I met Ed, Rob, Dave and a dozen others. Debbie saw me on a gig with Dave and I started playing with her. When a different Dave left his band I took over and after a few years moved on to play with Steve. I met Andy through Jamie and after a chance meeting on Woking station, he introduced me to Martin and Keith. That led to joining with Chris, Tommy and a different Steve. Chris left and Steve, Tommy and me played in a cover band for the next 8 years. John occasionally fronted the cover band and I did gigs with his band. Also played with Tommy in about half a dozen side projects. Had an occasional band with Rob and Jools. Ed got me gigs with Andy, Pete got me gigs with Eddy and Dave got me gigs with Johnny. Still playing with some of those guys (especially Pete, from school) and also now depping with Paul, John and Jeff's bands. I think that brings me up to date.
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Word of mouth.
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I asked in Anderton's about the new lighter Sire basses. They said they hadn't noticed any being lighter than the old ones. The weight is the only thing that's stopped me getting one.
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I am envious of anyone who is more successful than I am. The answer is to use that envy to push yourself to do better.