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Everything posted by Beedster
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Personally I'd stick it on a bass and keep it strung up. If you don't have a bass to put it on, buy a cheap body and a bridge, you don't need the rest of the stuff (I assume the neck has tuners?).
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Ha ha, no Tom, just didn't explain very well, I bought it 2 weeks ago - I was the winner of the auction linked to above - and then decided to go for the RBIV the next day. Even I don't need three fretted basses so decided to just move this one on again. I was going to put a Badass II and a white pickguard on (that is not my style of pickguard at all!), in fact I'll include the pickguard in the sale also
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Keep an eye out for a Heil PR40 on ebay mate, mine was about £200, although I may have been lucky C
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George Harrison dep wanted for Wilburys tribute
Beedster replied to Mr Bassman's topic in Other Musicians
I was almost tempted to move to Leeds for this, my family are very glad it's been filled -
TI Jazz flats strung through the body?
Beedster replied to Beedster's topic in Repairs and Technical
Many thanks guys, although I'll sue the lot of you if I snap one -
Calling all big valve/tube amp users - what spares...?
Beedster replied to Sean's topic in Amps and Cabs
[quote name='Sean' timestamp='1385231678' post='2285940'] I'm about to start gigging regularly with my Mesa Boogie 400+ and I was wondering what spares should I carry? I'd be interested to hear from any users of big valve amps what they carry as spares. I already carry a good DI but should I carry an array of valves too? [/quote] Never had a problem with a tube amp live, whilst I've had quite a few problems with hybrid/SS amps. I carry a DI just in case, depending on where the problem might be, it would go through the power stage of the head or into the PA. If it were a gig without a big enough PA I might take a small SS power amp alongside the DI. -
Wow, what can I add to the accolades above other than that I agree with them all and that I could have spent hours chatting to Roon, a top guy in every respect, and a worthy inheritor of an instrument that has some real personal meaning for me. Enjoy it my friend. C
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Bought this on eBay about two days before I bought WoT's Roscoe Beck. Usual surprisingly good Squier quality with the addition of the SD PUPs. I'd like to keep is as backup but I don't need it. eBay link here [url="http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/191016106766?ssPageName=STRK:MEWNX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1439.l2649."]http://www.ebay.co.u...84.m1439.l2649.[/url] The pickguard is nicer than it looks by the way, and the neck is rather fast and smooth. Looks like the J-PUP rout has been slightly extended, apart from that, all is fine. For £200 posted in a new gig bag you can't go wrong, either as a gigging bass or a backup for that lovely vintage Fender that you worry about every time you play The Dog & Duck C [url="http://s80.photobucket.com/user/Beedster/media/IMG_1833_zps060913f2.jpg.html"][/url] EDIT I've just looked at the pics on eBay and it really does look a whole lot nicer in the flesh so I'll take some decent pics myself tomorrow. The RCHP sticker will come off by the way.
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Thomastik Superflexible Solo - SOLD
Beedster replied to tayste_2000's topic in EUBs & Double Basses For Sale
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[color=#282828][font=helvetica, arial, sans-serif]Anyone know if it's alright to string TI Jazz Flats through the body? Never had much luck with La Bella flats, and my new Fender RBIV is crying out to get rid of its current rounds. Having paid quite a lot for the TIs, I don't want the E string going before I've even played it![/font][/color] [color=#282828][font=helvetica, arial, sans-serif]Cheers[/font][/color] [color=#282828][font=helvetica, arial, sans-serif]C[/font][/color]
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Thomastik Superflexible Solo - SOLD
Beedster replied to tayste_2000's topic in EUBs & Double Basses For Sale
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[quote name='BetaFunk' timestamp='1389902171' post='2339425'] No worries Beedster. I still don't really understand why they are so expensive though. Some of the prices are crazy and it seems as if they have jumped up in price within weeks let alone months. I agree what you say about your Marathon and i love mine but wouldn't pay what they seem to be going for right now. The same goes with my 1970s Fender Jazz. I love it but glad i bought it nearly 20 years ago because i wouldn't pay what they go for now. What we need to do now is find out the next 'must have'. I'm thinking of buying up all the pointy 1980s basses i can as cheap as possible and hope they are next years 'must have' and therefore increase in price ten times. If they don't then i'll have enough wood for the stove next winter! [/quote] Ibanez Musicians. I reckon this time next year they'll be going for around £1200. You can pick them up for £600-700 now. If I was in the buy and sell for profit game (as opposed to the buy and sell for substantial losses game that I appear to have played for several years), I'd be buying one now.
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[quote name='BetaFunk' timestamp='1389900571' post='2339391'] Yes, I must admit that i am but i've had my fun now. [/quote] No, you're fair enough mate, I'll admit that my estimate of their value in the other thread was somewhat lower than reality. I think there's a lot of them out there in very poor repair which explains the cheaper ones I'd seen (if my experience is anything to go by they're not as robust as the average Fender of the same era), and I imagine many of those - perhaps including the defretted one currently listed - are simply uneconomical to repair, hence the premium price for the good/mint ones. I have to say I really liked my Marathon, it was incredibly light and the neck was wonderful to pay, but it simply didn't have the tone I needed. I wish I'd tried it with flats though, I suspect that might have changed my mind at the time. C C
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[quote name='Stag' timestamp='1389887789' post='2339150'] That's lovely Chris, and in really good nick. You cannot, repeat, CANNOT beat proper Ampeg valve tone when using Precisions and Ricks. [size=1](IMO of course before someone says meh!)[size=3] - [/size][/size]Id love to hear mine through this! Someone buy this and give it a happy home (full of valvey goodness) [/quote] Agreed on all points, I have an old but good Faker that sounds absolutely magnificent through this rig, and it goes without saying that the Precisions refuse to play through anything else. Whilst I've had a lot of amps that do a good impression of the tone, there really is something magical about a passive bass through a set of Ampeg tubes and a nice heavy cab. I also love the solidity and stability of this rig, you could put it up against a rhino and the rhino would walk away shaking its head. I've had rigs from other brands that were really lacking in this respect. There's a thread elsewhere on BC about whether a 100w tube amp is enough. Well, what is 'enough'? I've a 300w Ampeg all-tube power amp sitting here that, no joke, if I fired it up in my garden would be heard 3 miles away. If you only need to be heard up to a mile away, 100w enough. [quote name='Billy Apple' timestamp='1389893594' post='2339258'] Is the cab sealed or ported? [/quote] Hey mate, it's sealed.
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[quote name='jbn4001' timestamp='1389821878' post='2338397'] Hi there, I have had a dpa4099b for about 4 months. I've not gigged in a while so haven't used it that much. I also have a Headway EDB2 pre amp to go with the mic. I recorded a demo in a jazz quartet at the weekend (drums, double bass, trumpet, guitar). We recorded live in one room , albeit in to 8 mics and channels (1 ambient room mic, 4 mics on drums, bass, guitar, trumpet). We were set fairly well apart as the room was large. I was partitioned off with half height boards and bits of padding. The problem: A lot of "bleed" or "spill" of all the other instruments in to the dpa mic. So the bass sounds fantastic on the recording, but the cymbals and the trumpet in particular bleed in to the mic which results in too much ambience in the recording - it sounds like the trumpet is playing far away in a bathroom! Short of playing alone in an isolated room, how can I avoid this excessive bleed? I'd like to use the mic at gigs as well as recording, but am now unsure how viable that is given the above experience. [/quote] That's surely applicable to all mics and DB, not just the DPA4099? You can use the bleed well in the recording, but only if the mic in question responds well to the other instruments (especially cymbals). I've also always assumed the DPA was more for live work and is designed to reject other instruments to a point. Unless you go to ridiculous lengths you'll always get some bleed, there are probably far better mics than the 4099 for recording DB with which the bleed might work better.
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This man knows his basses. He also knows how to pack a bass to ensure that a flood, a train crash and even a courier couldn't damage it. Great guy to do business with. Lovely lovely bass as well Chris