Jackroadkill Posted Sunday at 22:53 Posted Sunday at 22:53 On 08/03/2025 at 15:06, Osiris said: you're not going to be tempted by something that makes you look like you're wearing a bra... Where can these be had? Asking for a guitarist.... 2 Quote
Geek99 Posted Sunday at 22:59 Posted Sunday at 22:59 4 minutes ago, Jackroadkill said: Where can these be had? Asking for a guitarist.... You cannot be. Your question had punctuation and case-awareness. Most guitards are at the crayon-stage Perhaps you interpreted it from “Johnny go poo-poo”? 3 Quote
Geek99 Posted Sunday at 23:14 Posted Sunday at 23:14 14 minutes ago, Geek99 said: You cannot be. Your question had punctuation and case-awareness. Most guitards are at the crayon-stage Perhaps you interpreted it from “Johnny go poo-poo”? Seriously. Few have sentience 1 1 Quote
Norris Posted Sunday at 23:17 Posted Sunday at 23:17 15 hours ago, Shambo said: Allow me to pose a question only for arguments sake. So, you have a wooden guitar body that is heavy. Let’s say a 70’s Fender alder body that wasn't seasoned for long enough before it was wrapped in poly. If you were to strip the body back to the bare wood and place it in a ‘drying chamber’ then wouldn’t the seasoning process resume as the wood slowly loses moisture content and therefore weight? Let’s just ignore shrinkage and glued pieces and anything like that. Could you restart the seasoning process on an old piece of wood? It’s something I’ve wondered about occasionally. All instrument wood must be seasoned to make it stable enough to use. Otherwise it would be likely to warp over time. If wood were damp it's unlikely even a poly coating would stay on it for long. Some chunks of wood are simply more dense than others, even from the same species. Different growing conditions will affect the wood quite significantly - for instance swamp ash is quite slow growing, so is likely to be more dense, more stable and more resonant (although I don't really subscribe to the idea of tone woods). Also rock maple - a very stable wood suitable for making necks. I made a guitar body from a big chunk of African khaya - similar to mahogany. It was almost like balsa (which is actually a hardwood btw) in weight. It made a fantastic guitar (according to my guitarist) that was really light but sounded good. However another chunk of khaya is unlikely to have the same weight as the one I used though. In other words (and the tl;dr version), some guitars are just heavier than others 😂 2 Quote
Osiris Posted Monday at 05:21 Posted Monday at 05:21 6 hours ago, Jackroadkill said: Where can these be had? Asking for a guitarist.... Here's where I bought mine from. Quote
Rosie C Posted Monday at 07:38 Posted Monday at 07:38 9 hours ago, Terry M. said: But did it change it? Whether good or bad? No, I don't think it changed the fundamental sound of the bass. Quote
Terry M. Posted Monday at 10:54 Posted Monday at 10:54 3 hours ago, Rosie C said: No, I don't think it changed the fundamental sound of the bass. Thanks. I only asked because I once had an 11 pound plus bass that had tone for days and I often wondered if it would have sounded like that if it were say 2 pounds lighter. Quote
Lozz196 Posted Monday at 12:13 Posted Monday at 12:13 15 hours ago, Rosie C said: I have a jazz bass that I was kinda attached to, and yes I had a massive route done under the scratchplate. Along with changing the tuners for alloy lightweight ones and changing the solid bridge for a 'bent metal plate' type - it knocked a pound or so of weight off and made it very playable. Whether it was the best option is debatable - I love the bass and I'm pleased I kept it, but I'd probably have been better selling it and buying something else. 4 hours ago, Rosie C said: No, I don't think it changed the fundamental sound of the bass. That’s good to hear as am looking to get this done on one of mine. 1 Quote
TrevorR Posted Monday at 12:25 Posted Monday at 12:25 On 08/03/2025 at 12:09, Iheartreverb said: thanks for your reply. I’m aware that any massive changes would be a bad idea, I’m just out of option beyond moving it on. The straps is 2.5” Ernie Ball Neoprene comfort strap. As I say, it made a massive difference but maybe not enough. Also trying to stick with a strap that looks pretty normal and not some of the super wide or padded things. For my basses which are 10lb+ it’s got to be a 4 inch wide soft leather strap - I got Italia leather ones for all of them many moons back. They weren’t cheap but I view them as an investment rather than a cost! 1 Quote
TrevorR Posted Monday at 12:29 Posted Monday at 12:29 Chambering my not help as much as you think… this bass still weighs 10 and a half pounds! 1 Quote
Terry M. Posted Monday at 12:41 Posted Monday at 12:41 https://www.bassdirect.co.uk/product/maruszczyk-pes50/ My personal favourite. 4 and 7/8" width of real comfort to a heavy axe. I wouldn't be without it. Quote
bremen Posted Monday at 13:03 Posted Monday at 13:03 48 minutes ago, Lozz196 said: That’s good to hear as am looking to get this done on one of mine. Let us know how that goes, I have one or two candidates for a bit of liposuction Quote
bremen Posted Monday at 13:14 Posted Monday at 13:14 18 hours ago, neepheid said: OP doesn't like wide straps. You're wasting your keyboard's MTBF. Quote
Rosie C Posted Monday at 13:47 Posted Monday at 13:47 (edited) 1 hour ago, TrevorR said: Chambering my not help as much as you think… this bass still weighs 10 and a half pounds! Room for improvement though 😉 Though on a serious point, I think the most significant work on my bass was changing the tuners as that weight is right at the end of a 1 meter lever arm. Edited Monday at 13:48 by Rosie C 1 Quote
Terry M. Posted Monday at 13:49 Posted Monday at 13:49 (edited) 43 minutes ago, bremen said: I shared the link to my strap because it may be of interest to somebody else. For example I'm intrigued by the Italia strap idea shared by TrevorR. Edited Monday at 13:58 by Terry M. 2 Quote
TrevorR Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago On 10/03/2025 at 13:47, Rosie C said: Room for improvement though 😉 Though on a serious point, I think the most significant work on my bass was changing the tuners as that weight is right at the end of a 1 meter lever arm. That’s how that bass came - it was bought as a Frankenjazz so Hipshot Ultralites were the first thing I changed! I considered this but frankly for the likely difference it just wasn’t worth the hassle. A wide strap and it works fine! 1 Quote
TrevorR Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago (edited) On 10/03/2025 at 13:49, Terry M. said: I shared the link to my strap because it may be of interest to somebody else. For example I'm intrigued by the Italia strap idea shared by TrevorR. This is the Italia site. Think I’ve got 4 of these straps - all 20+ years old and still in perfect nick! Great quality and lots of colour choices! https://italiastraps.com/collections/4-inch-wide?srsltid=AfmBOoqngioYLIT2BrY7p6jMjTG5ENV5OqT2r8MeD8C1gm0pQ_etOnJ5 Your strap also looks very nice quality! Edited 18 hours ago by TrevorR 1 Quote
martthebass Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago How's the balance, is it neck heavy? I've occasionally had basses that gave me more shoulder problems not just from the total weight but from the 'drag' on my shoulder. I've had a few Mustangs and the most comfortable on a long gig was my old Mikey Way sig which was a good bit heavier than the Jap Mustang and JMJ I had - however both of these had some neck dive whereas the MW didn't. Quote
Pea Turgh Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago There was a member here who took a saw to the back of his heavy bass, taking off a perfect slice. Mad skills. 1 Quote
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