
Joe Nation
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Everything posted by Joe Nation
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It is if someone buys it 🙄
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NOOO!!! WD40 will wash out any grease from the bearing and significantly shorten the life span. It does have some lubricating properties but it will evaporate off if the bearing gets hot (which it will). Drop some 3-in-1 in there instead, or better yet re-pack it with grease.
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One thing my 7yo struggles with (apart from having the attention snap of a gnat) is managing all the strings. Going down to three is great because then they can focus one fretting finger on each string and strum all three without worrying about which strings to mute or play open or whatever. I got her a mini Strat copy for £20 on facebook, it looks and sounds great and I reckon she'll get there eventually, but I wish I'd seen the Loog first!
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If it's good quality quarter-sawn timber, especially if it's well-figured, then one piece works great. Three piece necks are a good way to reduce the risk of warping as the timber ages, as you can oppose the grains so any warping will be cancelled out by the other piece - handy to make use of otherwise-nice wood that isn't quarter-sawn. Also you can add a contrast veneer between the pieces for a distinctive look. If I were building a custom bass, I'd aim for a single piece of flamed maple, but if it was a through-neck I'd probably opt for a three piece for looks.
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Using guitar necks for sub short scale bass
Joe Nation replied to SamIAm's topic in Repairs and Technical
Check out Tim Sway on youtube, he makes some amazing and weird guitars and basses. He uses only reclaimed or recycled materials and isn't afraid to break a few moulds. His sliding pick-up bass and modular pick-up guitars are particularly cool -
Using guitar necks for sub short scale bass
Joe Nation replied to SamIAm's topic in Repairs and Technical
I've got my eye on a couple of used Strat bodies on ebay for just this purpose - either using a Retrovibe 30" neck or an undrilled Strat neck. -
I did drum lessons for a year at school, but I never carried on - no idea why as I love drumming. 20-odd years later I'm still always tapping away on whatever object is nearby, practicing polyrhythms and stuff. I'd love to take it up again but I can barely keep up with bass at the moment.
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Try your local motorcycle repairer, they're usually good with welding random bits like that.
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Also this: https://www.submarinepickup.com/pages/submarine-pro, so you can turn certain strings on and off, or have effects on some strings and not others. Kinda cool, but really weird.
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I'm curious about how the Bass VI sound compares to a conventional bass (eg a Jazz), a baritone guitar (~27" scale length) and a conventional guitar (eg a Strat). How are baritones and Bass VIs tuned compared to ~25" guitars - an octave lower, two octaves? Anyone know of any youtube vids with a good comparison? Obviously they'll all be very different, but I've never knowingly heard a Bass VI or a baritone in isolation.
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- harley benton
- guitarbass
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Were you being incredibly fastidious by running the string paths with a slight taper to match the bridge-to-nut taper (so each string is truly straight), or are you a normal person and just drew them parallel?
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Defo no pickguard.
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I'll take it if Jimothey doesn't want it.
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Well I never knew that. So perhaps it's not quite such a misnomer after all...
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He completely lost me at "I worked for Apple, I worked for Tesla, I drive a Tesla...". Hard pass.
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Someone needs to open a shop called Bass Strings Direct to stop all this confusion.
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Strat bass... nice try but no E-cigar
Joe Nation replied to Rich's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
The parallax distortion of the photos will make the body half look smaller than the neck half, because of where the camera was positioned. But unless the neck is specifically designed for that conversion, it may well be out of whack. -
FTFY: Fender make them, so people like them and order them.
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Is it just me or is it odd that the E string is on the narrower spacing but the G is on the wider one?
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*engaging pedant mode* That's a misnomer - those are digital calipers. Vernier calipers use a sliding subsidiary scale alongside the conventional graduated scale, with a graduation of n+1 increments over the length of n graduations of the conventional scale (eg 10 graduations over 9mm). This allows for interpolation of more accurate measurements. Wiki *disengaging pedant mode* Lovely work Andy.
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Was: From the ashes of disaster...now various projects
Joe Nation replied to Dom in Dorset's topic in Build Diaries
Did you know the Chinese use the same word for crisis as they do for opportunity? Crisitunity! -
Caught by the Fuzz - Supergrass