Quest_bikerider Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 I was just wondering, Sorry for the basic question but is it a good idea to get a bass guitar checked over by a professional workshop ie to check the truss rod is set right or the bridge is set up right etc. I have had my US Fender Jazz for about 8 years & apart from changing the strings Have not touched it, I dont think there is anything wrong & it plays & sounds great. Should I just leave it alone? Quote
Lozz196 Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 Well I`d say go for it. I always thought my basses were fine, until I had one set up properly. Totally different feel afterwards. Money well spent in my view, in fact, just picked up my backup bass from a luthier yesterday after having a basic set-up done. Quote
icastle Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 And as this is BassChat... I'm gonna say if it aint broken then don't fiddle with it. All we need now is for someone to come up with 'maybe' then we'll have the obligatory complete set of answers. Quote
leftybassman392 Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 (edited) Well, maybe... I'll get me coat. Edited February 16, 2012 by leftybassman392 Quote
Musky Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 (edited) [quote name='icastle' timestamp='1329425461' post='1542420'] And as this is BassChat... I'm gonna say if it aint broken then don't fiddle with it. All we need now is for someone to come up with 'maybe' then we'll have the obligatory complete set of answers. [/quote] Nooooo! According to your sig, between me, you and Lozz we've got to come up with another three answers! I'm going for 'Set it up yourself, but only if you feel it needs it.' Edit: Damn, now there's four of us in the game. Now how many answers do we have to give? Edited February 16, 2012 by Musky Quote
icastle Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 [quote name='leftybassman392' timestamp='1329426326' post='1542438'] Well, maybe... [/quote] Quote
icastle Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 [quote name='Musky' timestamp='1329426452' post='1542440'] Nooooo! According to your sig, between me, you and Lozz we've got to come up with another three answers! I'm going for 'Set it up yourself, but only if you feel it needs it.' Edit: Damn, now there's four of us in the game. Now how many answers do we have to give? [/quote] That's another .25 of an answer each I have to say though that the 'set it up yourself' route is the best way to go if you have the appropriate skills (and you'll only get those by practicing them). Doing a setup for someone else is always hard because you're naturally going to want to work to the standards that you find most agreeable to yourself and a fair degree of guesswork is going to be needed as to what the end user actually wants out of a setup. I always setup a new bass to suit me, I've never yet taken an instrument out of the box and felt that it was exactly right. Once that's been done it'll just get various minor tweaks throughout it's lifetime to keep it the way I want it. Whenever I change strings I'll quickly check to ensure that the intonation is still true and give it a general dustover, other than that they pretty much get left alone. Quote
Blademan_98 Posted February 16, 2012 Posted February 16, 2012 I set my own up too. It really helps understand the bass. If you don't feel confident then get it checked by a pro and ask if you can watch Quote
thepurpleblob Posted February 17, 2012 Posted February 17, 2012 1. Learn to do your own setup 2. If it's ok leave it alone. When I used to fix electroniky stuff for a living we'd get people in asking for xyz to be 'serviced'. I'd ask "what's wrong with it" and they say "nothing" so I'd give them it back - that's why I'm not in business any more Quote
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