brickers Posted yesterday at 14:04 Posted yesterday at 14:04 Picked up one of these at Anderton's yesterday, and I think I'm more surprised than anyone I ended up with something so metal looking - I'm overwhelmingly a funk, soul, reggae listener and player, though I listen to a some choice metal from time to time. Never gone anywhere near the metal look though. I'd put a deposit down on a Sterling Ray34 and RaySS4 intending to come away with something punchy for some fingerstyle funk (skills to follow...) and the guy in the shop offered it to me as an alternative to the RaySS4 - humbucker, passive, short scale. The ergonomics are great and I worry that it might have put me off 'normal sized' basses now. Things I like about it: Sounds close enough to a punchy stringray-style tone for me (don’t shoot me if your ears are more discerning than mine - I can only tell you what it did for me) I wanted a simple passive volume/tone set of controls. It has a simple passive volume/tone set of controls. Light, short scale Really comfortable on a strap or sitting down Fretboard dot placement is a nice touch It has rubber feet so you can stand it against the wall No neck dive. If anything it could drop the other way given the size and placement of the tuners but I haven’t felt that Tuners seem precise and solid - dialled into the note and stayed there straight away, unlike the fenders and sterlings I tested. Knobs and jack are similarly good. Finishing seems good for £500, though not 100% perfect, e.g. some of the black finish is unevenly on the side of the brown fretboard wood. However, it’s a dark bass and took me a day to notice, so I’m not bothered. Stainless steel frets 24 frets - again, never thought that I’d want that, but I was jamming with a backing track and some effects and it’s a nice register to have options in for layering Strap buttons are nicely placed Because of the way the headless system works (no idea if this is all headless systems or not), you don’t have to buy short scale strings - you can fit long scale strings to it and just cut them short (or leave them long if you don’t like your eyes). Handy if they don’t make the ones you want in short scale or if you already own some strings you’d like to use. Not sure I’ll be chopping down my TI jazz flats just yet though Neck is smooth with a satin finish Almost forgot - the gig bag it comes with really is good, with lots of thick padding, a neck support and two front pockets. Much better than the non-free one I got for my other bass Things I don’t like so much about it: The style… but I like that a lot more than I did now I see the ergonomics leading to it. A little red, gold and green stripe and I’m halfway to being Robbie Shakespeare in his Black Uhuru days, surely. When A/Bing with the sterling short scale there was… something about the HILS neck that felt lower quality. Not badly made or finished, just not as hefty in that reassuring way. Bearing in mind that the finishing of the neck is nicer on this bass than the sterling, and I don’t think about this issue now I’m not directly comparing the two. It might also just be a result of this bass’s lightness, so could be a feature rather than a bug Tone isn’t 100% stingray, and it doesn’t have that music man pickup style I love. But I there are options should I feel the need to butcher another guitar, and it’s nice to have an upgrade path I’m not looking forward to changing the strings I spent quite a bit of time A/Bing this and the sterling short scale, and though I could tell the differences between them when I switched, I didn't really feel when playing either of them that I was longing for the other. In the end, the HILS won on ergonomics, price, and to a certain extent build quality. 3 Quote
BassApprentice Posted yesterday at 14:26 Posted yesterday at 14:26 For those wondering - like me - how different a prospect of the HILS NEXT HNB3 is to a Stingray... Quote
brickers Posted yesterday at 14:40 Author Posted yesterday at 14:40 11 minutes ago, BassApprentice said: For those wondering - like me - how different a prospect of the HILS NEXT HNB3 is to a Stingray... ...very different indeed. I'm hoping my post comes off as 'look how surprised I am at how much I liked this bass' and not 'look at this funny shaped stingray' Quote
LeftyJ Posted yesterday at 15:10 Posted yesterday at 15:10 1 hour ago, brickers said: It has rubber feet so you can stand it against the wall That's brilliant! I love it Most headless basses have two bottom strap buttons, but having rubber feet sounds really useful and clever. Quote
ezbass Posted yesterday at 15:16 Posted yesterday at 15:16 1 hour ago, brickers said: A little red, gold and green stripe and I’m halfway to being Robbie Shakespeare in his Black Uhuru days That would look great. 1 Quote
BassApprentice Posted yesterday at 15:52 Posted yesterday at 15:52 Regarding changing the strings - surely this system is easier? Straight through the saddles into the headstock clamp. Tune up and cut the excess? No faffing around with cutting before winding and coming up too short or long? I've never had a headless bass but it does seem easier. Could be wrong though! Quote
tauzero Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago 1 hour ago, BassApprentice said: Regarding changing the strings - surely this system is easier? Straight through the saddles into the headstock clamp. Tune up and cut the excess? No faffing around with cutting before winding and coming up too short or long? I've never had a headless bass but it does seem easier. Could be wrong though! It is easy. You also won't put a twist in the string. DBEs are even easier as you don't have to cut the strings, but the bass has to be the right scale length (in fairness, basses with DBE headstocks will be the right scale length). Quote
brickers Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago 4 hours ago, BassApprentice said: Regarding changing the strings - surely this system is easier? Straight through the saddles into the headstock clamp. Tune up and cut the excess? No faffing around with cutting before winding and coming up too short or long? I've never had a headless bass but it does seem easier. Could be wrong though! I’ll hold my hands up and say I was parroting something I’d heard elsewhere when I said this. I watched their video for how to do it and it seems fine, maybe with some potential gotchas that the normal method doesn’t have. But then they’ve said what they are so shouldnt be a problem. 3 hours ago, tauzero said: It is easy. You also won't put a twist in the string. that’s a nice benefit Quote
brickers Posted 20 hours ago Author Posted 20 hours ago 5 hours ago, Pea Turgh said: If Batman was a bassist… im going to remove all the ergonomics and stick this in a giant yellow epoxy oval so it can look like the bat symbol 5 Quote
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