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Showing content with the highest reputation on 23/10/25 in Posts
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I blame Martin (@The fasting showman) for this. He sent me a message yesterday about an old Fender Bassman cab which was for sale on Facebook about an hours drive from me. I didn't know I wanted one of these cabs, and to be honest, I'm still not sure! But it was so cheap that it didn't make any sense not to go and buy it. So here it is. I am still in shock as to how big, heavy and awkward it is, the pics on Facebook didn't give a clue to scale, and I certainly needed help getting it in the back of my car from the house. Now it's home, I'm trying to figure out how to convince my wife that it's a good idea to keep it, when I don't have anywhere really to actually keep it! The speaker is a reconed JBL D140F apparently, but I'll check that out in due course. Anyway, feel free to roast my stupidity at today's purchase. Though it does look quite nice with my Bassman 50 on it I must say. Rob11 points
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Well, always wanted to have a go on. Road trip to Doncaster yesterday and returned with this example. A very decent price and it sounds immense. Not everybody's cup of tea but hey ho.7 points
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7 points
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Just noticed the pink is Fandango pink. This is all I can think of... From Toast of London7 points
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Music, like football, is pricing itself out of the hands of those who would most enjoy it, and can afford it.6 points
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Firstly, this is a cab I wanted when Genz Benz still existed. I never had enough bass tokens for one though. I'd not even heard one though. 2 12in drivers with a tweeter. 4ohm. 600w. 23kg. I bought this from @wavydavy Dave on here, and it was a great transaction (prompt and well packaged etc). I was going to buy a new bass, but I saw this and thought... let's get it. I used it for the first time last night at practice. I am really happy with it, especially in combination with the Bugera Veyron I bought recently. The lows are really tight and focused. It sounded really punchy . It's quite 'sparkly' even without the tweeter in use. I'm really looking forward to using at the weekend, especially as our drummer is using his Gretcsh kit not his electric 😁5 points
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Magnificent bass. I just want to play it and do nothing else. D’Addario Chromes are sufficient. I’ll keep them/won’t likely change for rounds as intended. Fret markers are at the fret lines not at the dots. A little odd but I’ll live. I may stain the top a deeper color (if it takes). I’m pleased and inspired to play more.5 points
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I bet he didn't - I bet he said something more like "You won't believe how many frets you need for slap - the 21st fret will shock you!!!"5 points
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Long time lurker, first time poster - had to make an account to send this one in. Courtesy of Fender's dealer portal, here's a date for this bass! The serial shows this bass an American standard jazz bass from the 15th of July, in the year 2000 Do what you will with this info, glad to be of help5 points
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5 points
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There’s nothing amiss. honestly…some dodgy inlay stickers and everyone loses their heads 😉😆 @bigmuff69 - Mark, if you want me to go and have a look let me know, assuming it’s local to you x5 points
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Hi Rob, You don't need cross bracing for the cab to work and many commercial cabs don't trouble themselves with it. The point of cross bracing is that linking opposite panels stiffens them both. as pressure changes in the cabs it pushes or pulls the panels and at certain frequencies (dependant upon the size of the panels, stiffness and their mass) they will resonate. Since the panels push out at the same time the forces cancel so the movement is damped. Putting the brace dead central risks creating a node and simply doubling the frequency of the panel's resonance so dead centre isn't great. Even slightlyoff centre though and you are good. The biggest panels are the most resonant, as smaller is also stiffer. Usually bracing front to back is difficult in a small cab as the speaker is in the way. If you are limited to a single brace then side to side is a good compromise. The two braces in my photo were my best guess for damping. I dropped the top to bottom brace later as it wasn't achieving anything. I don't spend hours on bracing. My simple method is to feel for resonances with my finger tips whilst feeding sine waves from a signal generator., sweeping up and down the frequencies. Putting the brace(s) where they do most good. a single side to side brace worked well and the cab is really quite well behaved. I'm pretty much agnostic on wadding. It's a really complex issue with lot's of theories but little proof. It definitely changes things in the cab and resonances are reduced but it's really hard to say that there is a working predictive model. I'd say cover the rear panel with some decently heavy felt stuck to the back panel with contact adhesive. Staples alone always work loose IME. If you want to go further then you can treat opposite panels or even cover them all. If you go for the white polyester wadding then make sure it can't move around in the cab and keep it well away from the ports.5 points
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Not refering to the Jean Michelle Jarre album! At the bass bash I brought some magnetic field paper to see what was under the pickups of various devices. Most are pretty obvious what you are going to see, but here are some notable ones. I found it interesting anyway As a reference, this is a standard bart soapbar, twin coil humbucker, looks like you would expect This is a high gain rickenbacker 4004 pickup, obviously originally designed to go over 4 strings, but covers 5 nicely A dingwall twin pickup - goes with the line of the pickups, with the high notes further out Here is a normal single coil and what I assume is a GK3B (although obviously could be a GK2-b This is a mudbucker on a homemade Gibson Les Paul bass clone - huge area covered and probably explains the name! This is a sandberg pickup in a soapbar case - looks similar to the dingwall pickups mostly - this pickup was lined horizontally, so the pattern is just how it is in the case A fender (actually squier) metal covered split bass pickup - I looked at two of these, and the pattern is the same, the D string has most of the magnets! On the same table - two single coils and a P pickup - no surprises but very well balanced Finally a G&L MDF pickup in a L2000 - as you can see the magnetic field is so high its bending reality around it. And maybe even gravity. Interestingly I wanted to put the Rickenbacker 4003 pickup here, but pressing hard against the pickup I can just make out the dots on the pole pieces, but it is so weak it is very hard to see.4 points
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My usual reaction these days is "Eff off! I'm not paying that!" Scot's gotta Scot. But it is getting ridiculous, and it's not just gig tickets. Someone's making money at our expense, and it isn't me, that's for damn sure. I rarely go out to the pub these days, never mind gigs, because the price of a pint is taking the p!ss. Maybe it has to, because if it's not the pubs who are taking the mick, then it's someone above them in the supply chain taking the mick out of them, to then take the mick out of me. I'm not having it. My wallet has a vote, and it's voting "no" a lot more often these days.4 points
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My lad did a Mensa Test (the proper one where you book in and attend, not something shonky off the internet) at 12 (he'd been mithering me for a while, so I took him down one Saturday), and that's always described as an 'intellgence test'. He got his results back (with an invite for Mensa membership) and scored 162 on the Stanford Binet, which is pretty much off the scale, so on paper he's very very very intelligent indeed. In the real world, however, I wouldn't trust him to sit the right way round on a khazi three out of four tries, he's as daft as a brush 90% of the time. There's definitely a limit to the usefulness of some 'intelligence'...4 points
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4 points
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Up for sale is my 2008 Squier Classic Vibe 60s Precision Bass This is from the first year of production from the Grand Reward Factory in China, there is lots of information about these online and don’t come up very often - there is currently one up for sale on eBay for £650. These are the more sought after models which were built to a higher standard than the later Indonesian models where they used Laurel fretboards rather than Rosewood and to not such a high QC standard. They only made the sonic blue finish for over a year or so. The bass has been fret polished, strung up with new strings and set with a nice action. It has some marks/dints which can be expected for age of it and there is a paint chip through to the wood on the rear of the body by the neck. This however happened before my ownership. There are no cracks or stress marked around the neck pocket. I have a cheap fender soft bag which will come with it. I have just weighe the bass using a couple of different scales and it comes in at 3.8kg/8lbs 6oz. Based near Stamford in Rutland.3 points
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Up for sale, a 1980 Kawai F-II B, 100% original condition and in perfect working order. 1450 € This rare, expertly-crafted Kawai clearly takes its design cues from Alembic, featuring maple/mahogany neck-through construction, maple/koa body wings, and active electronics, including the four-way rotary pickup selector only seen on the earliest F-II Bs. Each humbucker is powered by its own 9v battery, dynamic and immediate with great upper-midrange burp, and the bass benefits greatly from the articulation, immediacy and roundness of the active electronics. The bridge pickup has a potent sound with enough nasally top end attack to cut through when needed and provide the necessary presence. With both pickups engaged, there are a myriad of subtle variations via the three-way Tone Character toggles, and the interaction between both pickups and tone switches provides many of the most pronounced and thumpy sounds the bass has to offer. The mini toggles are essentially midrange boost/cut controls, neutral in the middle position. At the neck, the bass has a certain softness and breadth, with a pillowy low end that sits well in a mix, and the fourth position on the rotary pickup selector is a mute/kill switch. Neck Specs: Wood: Maple/mahogany (five-piece) Shape: Slender C Fretboard: Rosewood slab, dot inlay Frets: Medium jumbo. Scale Length: 34” Body Specs: Wood: Koa /maple Pickups: Humbucker x2 Controls: Volume x2, Tone x2, “Tone Character” three-way mini-toggle x2, four-way rotary Pickup selector Hardware: Rugged brass toplader bridge Original rectangular case. Worn but still functional. Shipping at the buyer's expense. Open to possible trades.3 points
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Just a public service announcement that might be of interest to electronics constructors - I picked this crimp connector set up for seventeen quid from the middle of Lidl yesterday. The crimp pliers work better (IMHO) than the highly-rated Japanese ones that go for £40 plus and in addition to the JST-XH and Dupont type connectors in the set, also work perfectly for Molex KK connectors - so much so that I will probably be flogging my Japanese one off on eBay shortly and hopefully getting more back for it than this Lidl set has cost me!3 points
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So I tried rolling off a little bit of bass and boosting the mids slightly and I think that it worked. I felt like I wasn't being lost behind the kick drum and it gave me a little bit more definition in my bass sound. A work in progress as no venue is the same, but a good start. Thanks for the advice everyone!3 points
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Shocking 3D printed cock would get far more hits. Those of the errant thumb persuasion may be tempted…3 points
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I did this about 9 years ago. A nice post punk trio I'd been part of for a couple of years was a bit light on gigs and I did 8 dep gigs for a mates band and sort of never left. Felt a bit guilty but the leader of the trio was a bit reticent at playing anywhere out of the locality and was too busy to do much on the getting gigs/promotion front so. There were no histrionics and I still see the drummer often and he's helped me out on many occasions since. Still with the band I depped for - longest dep ever.....3 points
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I appreciate that they've rescaled the headstock to a smaller body size - or at least, cleverly used black to help 'shrink' it optically. Also, the pink and yellow colours are fab. Maybe a bit too bold for my tastes, but at least they're taking some risks with statement colours, rather than black or wood.3 points
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Ditto, Royal Albert Hall last night. Front seats of a box, £60 each. Ate at a Lebanese restaurant beforehand (yum), £65 for us both. Travel to and fro with a railcard £40 for both of us. Been looking forward to last night all year and considered it to be fantastic value. I guess it all depends how much each individual values going to see live music - there is no 'one size fits all' opinion. Personally, it is one of the things I enjoy most in life, more so than making music, so I am more than happy to pay for it.3 points
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Indeed. I think you're effectively paying £100 just to be in a room with them. So many of these big gigs are a disappointemnt, too. I'm not a Cure fan really (I've never really tried), but Robert Smith speaks eloquently and passionately about this and I really respect that. Didn't they do something where ticket prices were limited to a price ceiling?3 points
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When I saw The Darkness last year Justin Hawkins, in between songs, announced that The Darkness` No 1 fan, Karl, was in the audience that eve. He then said, Karl, as you`re our No 1 fan how about putting your effing phone away and watching us. Did get a big laugh - rather ironically from many who were holding their phones up.3 points
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It's probably because the only bands big enough to flll the monster venues are heritage acts. I went to see mercury music prize winning Joe Armon Jones with two of the best jazz playing sidemen I've seen and it cost me £8 and there were barely 200 people there. A few minutes' walk away Mark King was slapping the beejesus out of a Jaydee for 3000 people.3 points
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I am now earning 12x what I was earning in 1987. My wages have probably outstripped inflation, but I dont remember 'old' people like me at gigs in the 80s. I suspect we are influencing the ticket costs more than anything and putting them out of reach of young people and teenagers.3 points
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(a) possibly and (b) probably not, from my experience. Bracing you can add if you feel panel vibration when you test it with a signal generator (e.g. phone app) - I put in a couple of diagonal braces from the rear to the side panels on mine. I didn't use any wadding in mine and reckon it sounds great without, so I haven't bothered trying it with. Happy constructing! ps: I have one up on you, my mum actually used my tea tray for a bit.3 points
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3 points
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I forgot about this one.It wasn't pretty. A classic. Not much I can say except don't get involved with the lead singer. I should have known better. Daryl3 points
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To be fair, I think that the music scene in most areas tends to be 'cliquey'. Musicians tend to get hired based on their reputation / who they know and people will recommend or hire bass players that they trust to not let them down and who they have a good relationship with. The trick is to build up your reputation and network to the point where you become part of the 'clique' that gets offered the best gigs! The second part of the trick is maintain your reputation so that you stay part of the clique and your place isn't taken by someone else!3 points
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If Adam Clayton doesn't want them then I don't either. Besides which, wearing a Rolex is just asking for trouble nowadays apparently. According to the Daily Mail, in central London you might just as well chop your own arm off with a chainsaw.3 points
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As far as bracing on this cab is concerned, I'd fit a brace on the baffle between the driver and the port. The baffle is always the weakest part of the box and it's worth giving it a bit more strength to prevent it from vibrating sympathetically. I'd also glue a vertical brace on the back panel. The centre of the back panel is the second weakest point of any cab. If you can, fit a front-to-back brace joining these two braces together, which will add to their effectiveness. As @Phil Starr says, this is a small cab and you can probably get away without any bracing, but it's not a lot of extra work and you can even fit it after you've built the cab. The braces should be about 40mm wide. It's up to you, but I'd certainly fit some wadding along the back, sides, top and bottom. About 25mm thick would be appropriate for this cab.2 points
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Oh God this...1000 times this. Every time I see someone casually dangling their lead carelessly, my inner voice screams "SORT THAT LEAD OUT OR YOU'LL TRIP OVER IT AND DIE!" I've never seen, or heard about a fatality caused by an untucked lead, but it's only a matter of time, isn't it? Isn't it? I'm right, aren't I?2 points
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2 points
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To be fair - I think this is a feeler for Cort (although they can surely see the SS market is pretty well established now...) The Action Jr is very basic, this has a few nicer aspects (roasted maple neck, Mark Bass preamp) so it probably will be around £250 rather than my previous comment of £160. If it goes well, I reckon you'll see a Fusion SS in the future.2 points
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Bought a couple of StingRays and need to make some room so have this beauty up for sale. Sandberg Panther Special which as specced new would be around €3000 now. It plays really nicely, has active/passive circuit, 3 band EQ an pickup blend which is a really cool feature. It’s in great condition other than a tiny ding on the headstock and back of the body. Pics added to show this. Serviced every year by my guitar tech in Bristol and it has never been gigged or even left the house (shame on me). It comes with the Sandberg soft case. This is my first proper bass so the heart may decide to not let it go and hence it may suddenly come off sale. Happy to deliver but also to meet for collection. Listed elsewhere as well.2 points
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Sixty-odd quid is fairly reasonable to see a "name" band these days. I don't think they make as much money from selling music these days, thanks to streaming services, so have to make it from touring, which can't be cheap to do.2 points
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Bought a Kiwami from @Lunoxx - thanks again mate, superb pedal - which needed some TLC and a pot replacement. I’m no electronics engineer, but I know enough to replace parts like for like, and I’ve fixed a few circuit boards in my time. I jumped on the chance to get one of these mad filter pedals, and the repair was interesting. I detailed some of the job on here: https://www.basexperience.co.uk/new-frontiers-pedal-repair/ anyone else repair their own electronics? I learned a lot on this job, particularly about desoldering.2 points
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For sale is my Schecter P4 Exotic bass. I'm giving up bass guitar. Just don't get the time to play and I need the space. It's a fantastic bass guitar. It has the EMG metalworks pickups. Great feeling neck and fast fretboard. Currently fitted with cobalt flats. Been well looked after. Versatile tone and sounds great. Would prefer collection, but I am willing to travel within reason to meet at agreed location.2 points
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I couldn't resist making a track about air fryers either. Production: Ableton v9 | Line 6 GX with POD Farm | DT 770 PRO Drums & claps - Found some drum samples and put them in the drum rack. Bass - Spector EMG-SSD through virtual constrictor(compressor) > Ampeg > 8 x 10 Strings - Disco strings VST Guitar - Jackson V > modulated Organ - Kontact stock organ through JCM 800 Vocal sample - Air fryer lady from internet > echo.2 points
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So, I am a sucker for Oly white Precisions and certainly for ones with dark rosewood necks. Big thanks to @Willfunk at BassBros for sorting me out with this Pro ii. Perfect weight, extremely resonant and has some serious grind!! And as per usual the service was nothing short of exceptional 😊2 points
