Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Since when did Sandbergs jump in price?!


Musicman20

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, rubis said:

What is thermal and sonic treatment?

Thermal is like roasted maple necks etc .... I guess helps make wood dryer like older wood would be.

sonic treatment is the idea that the wood sounds better on old instruments because the music has changed the structure of the wood or something? That one I don’t really get. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yamaha do this too. It’s basically they subject the finished bodies to vibrations which simulates ‘ X hours of playing’ and the thermal treatment is a process of drying to wood to recreate aging. Sandberg have worked with some local university’s to look at optimising the two processes. 

Yamaha unfortunately calls it I.R.A. 

 

 

5CB15624-9A54-4ACC-BB61-7DF790647162.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@rubis in Sandbergs case approx 100 hrs of specifically chosen frequencies are vibrates through the bass. This is constant and non stop.

Thermal is as you suspect the wood is maintained at a temperature, or sometimes is heated and brought down all within a very tight range.

Some people will or won’t agree that an older bass having been played sounds better as wood matures. Without getting into the nitty gritty too much, Wood is a cellular porous material, allowing it to mature in these ways will have some effect on its cellular structure and resonance for the good.

I am sure someone will say Mumbo jumbo, but Yamaha do something similar with their A.R.E. Technique.

Its nothing new, if you look at things like violins etc. They get better with age

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yep: may or may not work, but the marketing departments love it 😉

For the record, I loved the BB2024 I played for a while one afternoon at Bass Direct, and might have bought it were it not £2.5k*, and one of the nicest precisions I've ever played was a RW...just a shame it was all scuffed in exactly the same places as the one hanging next to it... 🙂

 

* but hey, all that toasting and wobbling's gotta be paid for somehow, right? 🙂 

Edited by Muzz
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, rubis said:

What is thermal and sonic treatment?

Ah, thanks everyone, this is making sense to me now! 

I've noticed Fender, Warmoth, Musicman and others offering roasted bodies and necks, and I'm prepared to accept that hallowed names such as these wouldn't waste research time and money on snake oil.

I also think I've read somewhere in the past that you could 'loosen up' the soundboard of an acoustic guitar and improve it's sound by placing it on top of a speaker and subjecting it to the vibrations, I suppose this is the same concept of quickly introducing the kind of vibrations it would naturally be subjected to over hours of playing 

The only thing which makes me slightly sceptical of these kind of claims though, is that manufacturers never seem to back up these claims with some sort of definitive A/B test of treated and non treated products, which would clearly show us the benefits, which seem subtle to my cloth ears, and that often all I can find is the testimonial of someone who has paid (a lot of money) for an instrument or part of one, and would, quite understandably, like to think it was worth the cost and an improvement on a stock item

Link to comment
Share on other sites

@rubis I think it will be very difficult to quantify such a variable as with hearing a note, or feeling how something plays it will be very subjective. Some people prefer new strings, some dead, some nickel, some steel etc.

Knowing how wood behaves as an entity, it’s logical, is it night and day, probably not, but having played them across the range with various treatments I think it makes a difference, couldn’t afford one new, but would stump up the extra for a second hand one

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We're in Tonewood Territory, and that's a rootn tootn place full of shootin from the hip: there's no AB, because it's all very subjective, I think the most telling phrase is '...someone who has paid (a lot of money)...and would, quite understandably, like to think it was worth the cost and an improvement on a stock item...'

Marketing Departments live and die by this...

Oh, and roasted maple, like a lot of tonewoods, looks lovely 😃

Edited by Muzz
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Aye Muzz, i’ll Agree there it’s Wild West Country, but this type of thing can work in your favour second hand.

Happens all across the place, for example USA made doesn’t mean better than Mex or Jap in some instances within some companies, that falls into the same category

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As a solution getting timber that is dry enough in quantities enough for mass production a heat treatment makes sense. Back in the 60s when all these classic vintage instruments were from the wood would be left to air dry naturally for a longer time.

I remember when I started playing Warwick made a selling point of their big sheds of air drying Woods they kept for years - stopped using that in their marketing when they stepped up the volume with the nu-metal Warwick boom

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yup, a couple of the worst basses I've owned were real-deal 70s Fenders. I sold them for hefty chunks of cash (market value) that were several times what they were actually worth without the name, the age, the mojo, etc... The 78 Jazz, in particular...I hope whoever bought it just hung it up as a trophy*, because it wasn't much of an instrument...

 

* And if they did, I hope they used long screws in the wall: it was 12lbs+....

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Cuzzie said:

Aye Muzz, i’ll Agree there it’s Wild West Country, but this type of thing can work in your favour second hand.

Happens all across the place, for example USA made doesn’t mean better than Mex or Jap in some instances within some companies, that falls into the same category

Paul McCartney would say...,

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Muzz said:

Yup, a couple of the worst basses I've owned were real-deal 70s Fenders. I sold them for hefty chunks of cash (market value) that were several times what they were actually worth without the name, the age, the mojo, etc... The 78 Jazz, in particular...I hope whoever bought it just hung it up as a trophy*, because it wasn't much of an instrument...

 

* And if they did, I hope they used long screws in the wall: it was 12lbs+....

Was they really that bad  , in what way  only asking as I was half looking at investing in one 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The 70s (especially the late 70s) are a very mixed bag when it comes to Fenders - there's lots of reasons for this, mostly around the CBS buyout, I'm sure there are many nice ones out there, but these two were basses I bought unseen (well, unplayed), and in those circumstances you take the risk. And in these cases they weren't good at all. Nothing disastrous like a twisted neck (tho it had a neck pocket gap you could have kept a spare pencil in), just an instrument which didn't feel or play as well as something which cost a fraction of what it did.

Investing, however, is another thing entirely - I'm sure the 78 Jazz has doubled in price in the few years since I bought it, as it ticked all the investment/collector boxes, like original case, nearly unmarked, etc. It was just as something you'd want to play, it left something to be desired. Which is possibly why it was unmarked in its case after 30-odd years...

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...