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When buying a used bass......


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[quote name='RAY AGAINST THE MACHINE' post='783863' date='Mar 23 2010, 07:42 PM']I was always under the impression, that if the back of the neck had bumps and thumps etc. ,
then you should avoid. How right/ wrong am I ?[/quote]

That wouldn't bother me if the neck was straight. I wouldn't particularly like it like that, but if it played great I'd get it.

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When I look at anything online I'm put off instantly by a grubby, covered in fingerprints and marks type bass. If it's not clean then it's a sign that no-one loves or cares for it IMO.

Also grainy pics taken with a phone from about 5 yards away, you can't even tell what colour it is half the time. Ebay annoys me as well, half a line of text to sell a bass for £600 with a bad pic of it.

Yes I'm picky but my gear is immaculate. I had a poor upbringing so I suppose I value what I've worked hard to buy.

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It has to have the sound I hear in my head.. if you have to really go looking for that, it probably isn't there.
After that, general condition. I don't mind a working bass condition as long as it is reflected in the price.

Cosmetically appealing to my eye and i am in a trad mood at this time, so no fancy shapes or wacky woods ... :)

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I hate dirt, or mojo as people who cannot be bothered to keep their gear clean call it.

I also cannot handle relicing which is a word that always looks wrong. If you've been unfortunate to ding your bass and can't/won't get it repaired then fair enough but doing it intentionally gives me the dry boak.

the other annoyance particular to Egay is people trying to sell a bass with a string or a knob missing - anyone looking at it is going to thing that its fecked but by spending a couple of pounds it can transform the way an instrument looks from sh!te to alright :)

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When buying a bass you should be put off by: a bent neck, cracks in the wood, pickups and electrics that don't sound good, rust on the hardware, any "home made" remodelling of the bass and a seller who can't or won't answer your questions.

Edited by chris_b
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I won't touch anything with a neck twist - unless it's cheap enough to just have it for parts. Most neck profile issues are just badly-adjusted truss rods and I've so far only encountered one that wouldn't correct out of probably a hundred or more guitars & basses I've worked on. Frets that are too worn to be levelled are a no-no as well. Pretty much anything else can be sorted out, and it's surprising how restoreable dirty & corroded hardware can be.

I don't mind honest wear & tear, in fact I quite like it on the 30+ year-old JapCrap I tend to play. Neglect , abuse and "relicing" aren't the same though. Don't really mind a bit of grime - when I get a new-to-me bass or guitar, the first thing I do is strip it, thoroughly clean it, spray pots & switches, level frets if necessary & set it up anyway.

Sorry about the guitar content - but it can't be said I don't like a challenge:

[attachment=45519:l6sorigcond.jpg]

Beautiful! Several gallons of acetone & 1000 cubic meters of toxic fumes later:

[attachment=45520:l6sstripped.jpg]

Of course I could've left it as it was & Ebayed it as Noel Gallagher's first guitar. :)

Jon.

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Like some of the others here, I like to concentrate on items that seem as if they have been cherished instruments, as opposed to those that have been simply abused.

Obviously we all buy a clunker from time to time, but with a reasonably careful eye you can spot the good stuff from the trashed and thrashed. :)

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