red rooster Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 Please excuse another silly question , my squire bass 60 classic precision with flatstrings gives me a sound I really like. But last night I was messing around with a traben active bass that my daughter has clamed for herself and holy cow that thing can growl seems to produce a multitude of different sounds when you adjust the nobs so I'm wondering if maybe there's a peddle switch or something I could run my squire through to produce similar sounds. Any thoughts no I'm not buying another bass. I can use the traben any time I like but I tend to take my squire out with me to work in the car etc. got a little amp and headphones at work and a vox for messing in the car. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve-bbb Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 Boss LMB3 adds a nice boost and colour to the tone Sansamp boxes are v good too Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Drax Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 I love that you play bass in your car. I've been debating a travel bass for the train.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
xgsjx Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 2 options spring to mind. The easy option is like Steve said, get a booster or pre amp pedal. There's the Boss that he mentions, or you could go for something like a Sansamp or similar. The other option is a little harder & that's to fit an active pre to your bass. You'd remove the passive circuitry from your bass to do so, but it would mean you don't have to carry a pedal about to get more sounds from your bass. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LukeFRC Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 i'm not sure a 60s style P with flats will ever sound like an active Traben - and the Traben will never nail the P bass thing either. What you have just discovered, in time for christmas, is a reason to get another bass.... or two. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
edpirie Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 I was wondering a similar thing recently. Have a Roadworn Jazz and wanted to be able to pump it up to a more active vibe for the odd track. I bought the Sadowsky pre-amp/DI despite the guy at Bass Gallery telling me that it wouldn't do what I wanted, and it didn't. There was no magic transformation of my lovely vintage passive Jazz into a modern super-J. So I sold on the pre-amp and am buying back my Yamaha TRB which is a proper pumped-up active bass through-and-through. As to putting a pre-amp into a passive, I'd personally be very wary of doing that if I liked my passive in the first place, even with an active-off switch. I've yet to play an active bass that has as good a passive sound as a straight passive P or J. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Merton Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 [quote name='LukeFRC' timestamp='1417420690' post='2620052'] i'm not sure a 60s style P with flats will ever sound like an active Traben - and the Traben will never nail the P bass thing either. What you have just discovered, in time for christmas, is a reason to get another bass.... or two. [/quote] Sensible, and accurate, advice Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tonyquipment Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 Get a booster pedal Cheap and useful if you want to amplify the signal to make it more rawr. The LMB3 I use. A passive bass just sounds crap without it IMO Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jezzaboy Posted December 1, 2014 Share Posted December 1, 2014 Get a Beringher BD 121. It will give you another range of sounds, is cheap as chips and is a really useful piece of kit. But a passive Jazz is what it is and most people get one to get the sound it makes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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