Tim Pharoah Posted Wednesday at 17:39 Posted Wednesday at 17:39 I read that some EUBs have headphone sockets. Does this mean that you just plug in the headphones and play? What powers the headphones? Is it a battery in the EUB or is some other device needed to hear the bass through the headphones? Excuse my ignorance but I have never seen or played a EUB. Also, any recommendations on which EUB would be suitable for such silent practice would be very welcome. Thanks Tim Quote
Rosie C Posted Wednesday at 17:45 Posted Wednesday at 17:45 I had one of the Gear4Music EUBs and from memory it had a 9v battery inside. But I found it a poor substitute for a double bass - lacking a proper body I couldn't follow the technique my teacher encouraged of using forearm muscles to 'fret' (stop) the strings. Quote
Burns-bass Posted Wednesday at 17:56 Posted Wednesday at 17:56 To answer your first question, the Yamaha Silent Basses do have a headphone socket so you can plug headphones into them. The others will require some sort of pre-amp. Or you can use an amp plug or something like the WaZa air. Do you want something you can bow or something you can play with your fingers? The Silent Basses, MK basses, Eminence bass and Kolstein are best for bowing (although none is like a double bass). If it’s playing pizzicato, then any would be ok. You’ll need to find one with a body brace that works for you. If you want to transfer what you know to DB, then choose an EUB with the appropriate scale. (A 34” scale like the Ibanez or some Wav basses is little better then electric bass practice). Quote
Grahambythesea Posted Thursday at 21:46 Posted Thursday at 21:46 I have a NS NXT which is passive and to listen through headphones I use a Blackstar Headphone amp. I believe the later models are now active so may be ok to plug in the headphones direct. Quote
Beedster Posted Thursday at 22:00 Posted Thursday at 22:00 For silent practice on an instrument that feels close to an upright to play the Yamaha SLB-100 is hard to beat Quote
simonlittle Posted Friday at 00:44 Posted Friday at 00:44 On 23/04/2025 at 18:56, Burns-bass said: To answer your first question, the Yamaha Silent Basses do have a headphone socket so you can plug headphones into them. Only the Yamaha SLB100 has the headphone socket. With the SLB200 or SLB300 you’d need something in between (headphone amp, audio interface etc). I play an SLB300 and it’s great for silent practice both arco and pizz. Usually plug in through my audio interface. Scale and feel matches my acoustic upright perfectly so everything is directly transferable. Quote
Burns-bass Posted Friday at 07:11 Posted Friday at 07:11 6 hours ago, simonlittle said: Only the Yamaha SLB100 has the headphone socket. With the SLB200 or SLB300 you’d need something in between (headphone amp, audio interface etc). I play an SLB300 and it’s great for silent practice both arco and pizz. Usually plug in through my audio interface. Scale and feel matches my acoustic upright perfectly so everything is directly transferable. Interesting! I assumed the whole point of the silent bass was you could plug headphones into it. Assumed it was standard across all models. I had an SLB200 actually, but I only ever played it through an amp. I don’t doubt the SLB300 is great, but I could never justify the cost. 1 Quote
Tim Pharoah Posted Friday at 11:36 Author Posted Friday at 11:36 Thanks for these insights, really helpful. Tim Quote
Beedster Posted Friday at 12:04 Posted Friday at 12:04 4 hours ago, Burns-bass said: Interesting! I assumed the whole point of the silent bass was you could plug headphones into it. Assumed it was standard across all models. I had an SLB200 actually, but I only ever played it through an amp. I don’t doubt the SLB300 is great, but I could never justify the cost. The 100 was designed with orchestral players in mind, the 200 and 300 more with gigging/travelling jazzers and pit players front and centre. The 100 always required a bridge or mag PUP to work live as the piezo/pre were optimised for headphone use and sounded awful amplified, the latter models overcame this 👍 1 Quote
Burns-bass Posted Friday at 16:50 Posted Friday at 16:50 4 hours ago, Beedster said: The 100 was designed with orchestral players in mind, the 200 and 300 more with gigging/travelling jazzers and pit players front and centre. The 100 always required a bridge or mag PUP to work live as the piezo/pre were optimised for headphone use and sounded awful amplified, the latter models overcame this 👍 Yes this makes sense. I had a Full Circle pickup in the one I had. (which was probably yours at some point) Quote
Beedster Posted Friday at 17:33 Posted Friday at 17:33 41 minutes ago, Burns-bass said: ....which was probably yours at some point... A strong statistical likelihood Lawrie mate 😁 Quote
Norris Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago At the very budget end of things my Stagg EUB has a headphone socket. It is very much a stick bass, but does have brackets that loosely approximate the shape of a DB. I love playing it when we do "acoustic" gigs. https://www.normans.co.uk/products/stagg-edb-3-4-bk-3-4-size-electric-double-bass-in-black?variant=40045424378056&srsltid=AfmBOopvovqKKRWHQtIFtmL9xwJj7Ez_ho5SirrqDcLe511xkGl6H5nN_rA Quote
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