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Precision Necks


philw
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All,

After something like 30 years of fiddling around on bass I thought it was time I got a fretted Precision (I did own a fretless Jazz/Precision hybrid for a while but that didn't count).

I don't have much to spend, maybe up to £300, so it'll no doubt have to be a Squire – either new or previously loved. I'm confused about necks however. To my eyes, the best looking Squire Precision around at the moment is the Classic Vibe 50s P Bass. I love both the tele style and the maple fingerboard. Trouble is, having tried one I really didn't get on with the chunky neck (I play a fretless Wal mostly). So who can guide me through necks fitted to Squire Precisions? What about the Vintage Modified Precision Tele Bass? What about the Mike Dirnt? And if I were to stay away from the Tele style what should I be looking for?

Phil

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Unfortunately mate, that's generally the nature of the beast. I find P necks are often very chunky compared to Jazz necks and I don't get on with them much either. I play an SX P bass and the neck is huge compared to my MIM jazz bass.

Maybe look for cheap deals on Warmoth and build your own? I think their J necks fit all the P bodies.

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[quote name='Mr. Foxen' post='641085' date='Oct 30 2009, 01:54 PM']I find the neck on my Squier tele bass to be a bit thin for my liking. If the other one has a tele headstock and is chunkier I'd cheerfully swap, its a bit used, but has got a fair bit of birdseye in it.[/quote]

This is my problem. Precision necks vary considerably between models, trouble is, apart from knowing that the Squire Classic Vibe 50s neck is too chunky for me, I'm not sure how the rest of them measure up.

I might consider a swap Mr. Fox, but I'd rather exhaust the other possibilities first.

Phil

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[quote name='philw' post='641113' date='Oct 30 2009, 02:21 PM']This is my problem. Precision necks vary considerably between models, trouble is, apart from knowing that the Squire Classic Vibe 50s neck is too chunky for me, I'm not sure how the rest of them measure up.[/quote]

Figure out which dimension you are concerned about, and ask people with them to measure up.

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[quote name='philw' post='641113' date='Oct 30 2009, 02:21 PM']This is my problem. Precision necks vary considerably between models[/quote]

Yeah, i've found this - although the CIJ 62 Precision i recently acquired is pretty much bass nirvana for me, the neck feels like it was custom made for my hands - although as you rightly point out, some a a lot more baseball bat like than others.

But as a Precision player coming from a Jazz, it's a really nice comfortable neck and i'm pretty certain this one's a keeper

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I don't know how accurate the CIJ neck is, although I do find the CIJs generally very reliable. However, the real 60's Precisions necks are mostly less chunky than the 70's and later versions. The headstock to neck detail was also different in the 60's Ps. I would look at the reissues and a secondhand CIJ would be an excellent choice.

Davo

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Fender and Squire give the dimensions on their web site.
[url="http://www.fender.com/products/search.php?section=basses&cat=precisionbass"]http://www.fender.com/products/search.php?...t=precisionbass[/url]
[url="http://www.squierguitars.com/products/search.php?section=basses"]http://www.squierguitars.com/products/sear...?section=basses[/url]

Click on the specifications

I found the 1.65” width of the MIJ ’51 reissue to be a very nice neck.
It is a tad wider 0.15” than the Jazz bass, but has rounder contour.
Switching between a ’70 Jazz and the ‘51 isn’t a big deal.

The Mark Hoppus has a wide 1.75” width, flat but wide enough to be anointing to me. I replaced the P neck with a Jazz neck on mine.

I’d suggest you just try out as many as possible and I’m sure you’ll find one that feels and sound right to you.

MM

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So I tried a couple more Squire Precisions today (thanks GAK). First, the Vintage Modified Precision TB neck felt great: reasonably chunky but not so much it was a problem, far better than the impossibly baseball bat like 50s Classic Vibe Precision. Only issue with the Vintage Modified is an unremittingly dark (but very ballsy) tone thanks to the single neck position humbucker – at the right price I could be convinced. Then I tried the Mike Drint and I'm really struggling to come up with anything positive to say. Weedy tone, and genuinely horrible neck (a poor setup and a non-functioning tuning machine didn't help). Unattractive looking instrument too.

Phil

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[quote name='philw' post='643872' date='Nov 2 2009, 09:14 PM']Only issue with the Vintage Modified is an unremittingly dark (but very ballsy) tone thanks to the single neck position humbucker – at the right price I could be convinced.[/quote]

Dimarzio model 1 will sort that, but the spacing is a bit wrong so you'll have to get a narrower bridge (one on it is a weakness too).

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