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ead

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Everything posted by ead

  1. Reluctantly putting the Squier MB-5 up for sale as string spacing is just a bit too narrow for my digits. On the upside have found a new Squier VM Precision V (made in 2016??? - thought they were discontinued a year or two back) which is really rather nice.
  2. Lovely indeed. I have a VS4 on order atm but in Dakota Red with matching headstock. Shouldn't be too long now....
  3. Good to know, thanks for the heads-up.
  4. Thanks. Definitely a pleasantly surprising instrument.
  5. Just traded my Fender Am Std for a US Sterling. As per above Ash is a total gent and great to deal with. Thanks for the trade.
  6. I have just acquired one of these (now with Kiogon harness) and it sounds pretty good. The band certainly liked it. What did surprise me was the serial number which starts ICS16....This would appear to indicate made in Indonesia by Cort in 2016. I thought these were a discontinued line?
  7. If I'm honest I don't play enough fretless bass, although I had one of mine at practice last night. I really should play more as I much prefer them. I play blues & classic rock covers in one band and original material in another. The latter can be quiet acoustic material to quite hard driving tunes. I certainly don't feel the need to play a defined genre with mandatory chorus pedal (although I do own one )
  8. [quote name='Stylon Pilson' timestamp='1490172034' post='3262740'] Most of my playing experience over the years has tended to be with bands playing original music. It's fun, but there are always a lot of gigs to small crowds, and the feeling that my "competition" in this marketplace is with teenagers and kids in their early 20s who just have a whole lot more dedication than me, who are throwing themselves into their music with the dream of one day making it big. So I've been toying with the idea of shifting into covers bands, where I can play great songs well, to an audience who want to dance and sing along. I've got one opportunity in the pipeline, but the example set list that I've been sent is far from inspiring. Sex On Fire, and other such songs that seemingly all covers bands have been playing for the last five years. I'm worried that I'd get bored quickly. Should I rule them out on this basis, or is this just something that comes with the territory? And if I do decide to rule them out, what's a diplomatic way of letting them down gently? S.P. [/quote] Why not do both. I play in a Blues & Classic Rock Covers plus an originals band.
  9. [b]F/S Squier MB5 5-string Bass VGC £250[/b] For sale is this Squier 5er. Not many of these around and little about them on the interweb. I have found a few bits of info that I have included below. This bass is something a little different from the more traditional Fender/Squier offering having a small contoured body with no pickguard, an angled headstock with a scarf joint and 3 over 2 tuners. The body has a few marks and light scratches and there are a few small dings around the edge of the headstock. The colour is a black with a subtle metallic finish so not super-sparkly. The neck is very slim. I measure the thickness to be 20.8mm at the 1[sup]st[/sup] fret and 21.6mm at the 12[sup]th[/sup] fret. This was done with my Dad’s old micrometer screw-gauge (remember those anybody?). Tricky to photograph so if the pics below aren’t doing it for you let me know and I’ll try again! The scratch pictured doesn't look nearly as bad in real life, I think it's the effect of the flash on my camera. [b]Things to note:[/b][list] [*]A previous owner changed the tuning machines to black items and you will note that one has a missing cover. This will be sorted by the time the bass sells [*]Truss rod cover is missing [*]Dunlop dual action straplocks fitted [*]I will have also added Jazz style knobs as the ones I inherited were truly unpleasant (the chrome knobs you see are some spares I have but intend to keep hold of) - [b]Now sorted[/b] [*]I have also upgraded the standard fit (and non-functional) electronics from the original V/B/T to a Kiogon V/V/T Jazz harness. [*]The bass has a brand new set of Fender NPS strings [*]A good quality padded gig bag is included [*]It’s a lightweight bass. I measure it at 3.7kg on the scales (around 8lbs 3oz in old money). [*]The serial number is IC030829278 indicating that the bass was made in Indonesia by Cort in 2003. [/list] [b]Price[/b] For sale at £250 ex works, but feel free to make offers. I’m happy to meet up or deliver within a reasonable distance for a bit of petrol money. [b]The original Squier spec was:[/b][list] [*]Sleek Agathis Contoured Body [*]Maple neck, C-Shape, (Polyurethane Finish) [*]Rosewood ‘board, 12" Radius (305mm) [*]22 Medium Jumbo frets [*]34" scale length [*]Width at nut 45mm [*]String spacing at bridge 17mm [*]3-Over 2-Under Die-Cast Mini Tuners [*]Special Design 5-Saddle [*]2 Single-Coil Jazz Bass Pickups [*]Volume, Balance, Master Tone controls (now upgraded) [/list] [b]Pictures:[/b] It remains a complete mystery to me how images decide to orientate themselves on topics here. They look fine on my laptop [b]Background[/b][b] info from the Fender website: “Other” Fender basses part III: Early 1990s to present[/b] [b]MB basses (1994-2011).[/b] By the mid 1990s, the ubiquitous Precision and Jazz basses had proliferated into more than a dozen models of each. To augment this flourishing selection of the two traditional basses, Fender once again sought to introduce something new and different at a modest price point—hence the 1994 introduction of the Japanese-made [b]MB-4[/b] and five-string [b]MB-5[/b] basses. These offered smaller bodies with no pickguard and a more contemporary shape and overall look (“MB” stood for “modern bass”), with triple-laminated maple necks and tuners on both sides of the headstock. The MB-4 had a Precision/Jazz pickup configuration; the MB-5 had two special design single-coil pickups. Neither was a big seller, however, as players continued to prefer more traditional Fender basses, and they were discontinued in 1996. That wasn’t the end of the story, though—when Squier launched its own Modern Bass series in 2001, the MB-4 and MB-5 were resurrected as Indonesian-built models that were even more affordable than their Fender predecessors of the previous decade. These fared considerably better, remaining in the Squier line-up through 2008, and a 2003 metal-themed model with skull-and-crossbones body graphic and fingerboard inlay work, the aptly named [b]MB-4 Skull and Crossbones Bass[/b], lasted until 2011. [url="http://www2.fender.com/experience/guitarchive/other-fender-basses-part-iii-early-1990spresent/"]http://www2.fender.c...y-1990spresent/[/url] [b]From Talkbass (iirc)[/b] The Fender MB-4 and MB-5 were Japanese made. MB stood for "Modern Bass." After FMIC got started up they recognized the competition they were getting in lower cost basses and guitars from Japanese companies like Ibanez, Yamaha and Aria. The market share they had grabbed was substantial and FMIC wanted that market share back. Where there had been essentially four professional lines before this time (Fender, Gretsch, Guild & Gibson), there were many more companies in the mix then. FMIC wanted to develop cutting edge instruments to not only compete with the other Asian brands but surpass them. This led Fender into a project with Fuji-Gen to start a new brand call HEARTFIELD which came to market in 1989. FMIC rounded up some real major league talent in R&D. The Heartfield instruments were awesome. In the time it took to develop them and get production started, the YEN started spiking against the US Dollar, so by the time they came to market they were more expensive than they thought they would be when the project was first started and during the run became practically as expensive as a USA Fender due the shrinking US Dollar. These were amazing instruments with serious innovations in some cases. Neck through bodies, low-impedance XLR direct output jacks and better electronics than any top of the line Asian bass made them really first rate instruments though not only then, but even now. After less than 4 years the decision was made to retire the Heartfield line and about 1993 they ended the run. Two Heartfield designs were continued in production in both 4 and 5 string versions and one of them was rebranded Fender as the MB-4 and MB-5. The Fender Prophecy also was initially developed as a Heartfield model. These are both really very decent and respectable instruments. They play and feel a lot like an Ibanez but I thought they sounded more substantial and "Fenderish" than their Asian competition. When the Fender MB series was discontinued in Japan, Squier took over the MB design and moved production out of Japan slapping the skull & crossbones on it to make it look more appealing to the youth market.
  10. ead

    NBD - ACG

    [quote name='BassBus' timestamp='1489567024' post='3257906'] Alain is the ACG family. He buys half Mr. Cringean's stock. Lucky man. [/quote] I'm still a very distant second to Scoop and possibly one or two others.
  11. [quote name='Phil Adams' timestamp='1489685392' post='3259005'] C'mon chaps. The man has GAS! There is only one known cure........ [/quote] Absolutely. The must be some research suggesting that buying a Yamaha improves your slap performance by over 87%.
  12. Done. Will Q10 not generate mostly Maybe answers as the final product is not yet specified?
  13. [quote name='dood' timestamp='1489662386' post='3258702'] At the nut end the outer winding of the B string falls short in all the examples I've seen including my own basses. I'd be interested to see a picture of yours to see how the string does go on. Maybe you have a different model, I have no idea! Mine is a 2016 version. [/quote] You're absolutely right, the last (or first depending on how you view it) doesn't quite make it. Back in my box now [attachment=240794:Nut pic.jpg]
  14. For me highest is Station to Station; lowest The Laughing Gnome
  15. Sadly I don't have the bass anymore but I'll see if I can find a pic of the relevant area.
  16. [quote name='Conan' timestamp='1489571439' post='3257954'] Oh right! So there is no such thing as a "Gen 2 Compact" then? [/quote] [quote name='alexclaber' timestamp='1489575389' post='3258015'] No. [/quote] See, I told you I would probably be wrong Still what ever it is it's a marvelous beastie and has been gigged in small pubs large clubs, backs of wagons etc. etc.
  17. [quote name='dood' timestamp='1489345959' post='3256241'] They won't fit the Dingwall 37" basses (e.g AB1) but will fit the Super P and Super J basses as they have a shorter scale length of 35" [/quote] The super long D'Addarios fitted the B string on my Combustion well enough with no silk hanging over. Are the Combustions different in some way as I thought Dingwalls were all 34" to 37" scale unless you otherwise requested?
  18. I have a Cali II passive TT (J bass). Excellent Jazz clone with a great neck although note that it's not super skinny. Just ordered a VS (P bass) with custom paint job.
  19. ead

    NBD - ACG

    It is indeed a P/J setup. The J p/up is set quite close to the bridge, and I don't know for certain but ACG p/ups normally have ceramic magnets unless you ask for Alnico. I've not had a massive amount of quality bass time with this one yet but it definitely has a bit of bite to it in a good way. The EQ is stand John East (not a filter EQ on this bass) plus the benefit of an active/passive tone control so i think I'll get a wide range of tones to access. Nice and light too at a little over 8lbs. The bass also has the ACG/Newtone strings fitted which I've never had before so I'm interested to see what they are like compared to my normal D'Addario Nickel BT sets.
  20. My Gen 2 Comact has 2 Speakons, but I think the corners are heavy duty plastic rather than steel. Bloody marvelous cab (along with my Midget) I've been gigging them for 7 or 8 years now. No thoughts of changing them at all.
  21. I had to change a battery mid gig 2 weekends ago. No sweat I thought as the bass had on of those tilting battery compartments so it's 5 seconds of a job if that. I had an RS branded battery in my pocket (as I always do just in case). However once the RS battery was inserted the battery compartment wouldn't quite shut properly. Still no problem switched the bass to passive and off we went. When I got home I had the chance to investigate further. It turns out that the RS branded item that I had taken out of a pedal was about 1mm taller than the Duracells I routinely use. Needless to say these have been removed from my spares box.
  22. I believe mine is a Gen 2, and I'm fairly sure there was a Gen 3 at least. I think it then morphed into the Super Compact. Could be completely wrong, I usually am
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