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  2. You can by a single 135 Roto 66 to go with a normal 66 swing bass set. I couldn't find a single set.
  3. I won't. Wattsits, that's watt.
  4. Come on, Mr Stubz, you’ve wandered off, without your medication again, back to the DoI with you.
  5. When I was in the scouts, every year we had to collect holly to decorate the church. We started by chopping branches from lots of male trees with their spikier leaves. Then an awful afternoon using hot hoof glue to attach red cotton wool berries. I can still smell that stench...
  6. Moderator screams of, “My eyes! My eyes!”
  7. Do you know what year it is and whether it's got a ceramic pickup? Cheers.
  8. Double post
  9. I had one years ago. What an amazing amp and such a bargain. GLWTS
  10. In this scenario though, the 51-style neck would have a squared off heel rather than a rounded one like the later Precisions, so would have required a fair bit of work to make them fit. It's a rosewood fingerboard too, so the more likely scenario is a reshaped headstock IMO
  11. Have been really enjoying the combination of IEMs plus personalised monitor feeds we've now got via our digital desk (A&H CQ18T in our case). By way of background, in case of help to anyone (and apologies for those of you who are already familiar!), it's been a bit of a journey for me: switching to KZ ZAR IEMs a year back from the more budget KZ ZS10s which I had tried out for about 18 months prior was a game changer in providing a fuller more rounded sound vs something that I found a little toppy/harsh in the case of the more budget option and which had almost made me want to give up on IEMs. The better preamps in the A&H desk plus the personalised feeds was yet another step up and I was finally getting an experience that was comparably good to using a backline amp. And with a line-up change six months back and the new guitarist being very happy not to have a stage amp (he doesn't have a car so is able to get to gigs with pedal board and guitar on public transport) was the icing on the cake in terms of not having to deal with an overloud guitar amp on stage, which I'm sure we have all had to suffer from from time to time! Our singers seem to particularly love IEMs, in general guitarists I work with the least keen; they miss the harmonic richness they get from their amps. But the thing that I've had to wake up to is going from an overall sound where the non-IEM stage monitoring was sometimes meh (and that was on us for not wanting to invest in and lug separate stage monitors for each band member) but where our FoH sound generally pretty good to my ears, to a few gigs over the past six months where the band have had a really good gigging experience with IEMs, but me wandering out into the audience mid-set and discovering that the FoH was far from decent and punters getting a drum heavy mix, which didn't seem to be the case at initial soundcheck. Has been particularly the case with new venues and/or if they have an in-house PA. It's rare that the venues we play at have sound engineers on site and we certainly can't justify having one ourselves. So I guess the key learning point I wanted to share is that if you are getting a good IEM mix from your desk, don't let that lull you into a false sense of security about the FoH sound! If anyone else has similar stories, please do share!
  12. Hmm.. Yes, seems unresponsive - it was up yesterday as I went to it during the day. Will check
  13. Yes, Moderator. You arent missing anything
  14. So you are saying that instead of mass-debating, we should just ensure our gear is as stiff as possible.
  15. Long shot... try recording the sound with various set-ups and then have a session with you all listening to the recording on some decent kit.... Probably overly optimistic. As a long-in-the-tooth hi-fi nut, I know that not everyone hears things the same way.
  16. I'll open mine up in a bit.
  17. I'm liking the remix. The vocals seem to sound better. Not sure why? 🤔
  18. Flight Case by Thon, Made in Germany. Good condition, see pictures Outside dimensions (W x D x H): 48.5 x 32 x 50.5 cm Suitable for small combo guitar amps or other equipment.
  19. I was going to make this point too. I used to have an old Park valve head which was designed for bass but was bought off me by a guitarist who reckoned it was the beat amp he'd ever played though. I assume this is why the original Fender Bassman amps are so popular with guitarists too. GLWTS
  20. Two most common rattles on my cello are the end-pin, which is easily sorted, or it's the mute when not applied. The mute is a basic Torte one and when not in use it's slid over teh strings between the bridge and the tailpiece. In some locations it causes a rattle, which menas adjusting how/where it's sitting until the sound goes away.
  21. So, if I understand it correctly, Mark is using his Jaydees again nowadays, because he doesn't need an apostrophe. Right? Ultra pedant revenge. 😉🫨🤔🤦🏻😂
  22. Is it possible to run the bxr 400 into a single cab? I’m not trying to run both inputs. I just wanna know nothing is gonna blow if i just rig it up like you would any other bass head. One head one cab etc.
  23. Hi All I bought his brand new and unopened Vengeance LPX RAM package but it took so long to arrive that I no longer have use for it. Corsair VENGEANCE LPX DDR4 RAM is a 16GB memory kit (2x8GB) running at 3200MHz Brand New with Corsair Warranty The model number is CMK16GX4M2B3200C16, and it is a PC Card form factor designed for high-performance computing. Package include- 16GB memory kit (2x8GB) Running at 3200MHz
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