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Showing content with the highest reputation on 20/03/18 in all areas

  1. If you're going to patronise people (that means "talk down to" for all you thickies out there ) then at least learn to spell pigeon.
    15 points
  2. When I was in a local pub (Forest of Dean) someone made a crack about shagging sheep, to which an old soak at the bar shouted: "We don't shag sheep, we rape outsiders." It was crude, but got the point across adequately.
    4 points
  3. 4 points
  4. I felt this just warranted its own thread.
    3 points
  5. I'm dyslexic. And because my dyslexia can make written communication difficult for me to read on occasions, I do my very best to make sure that what I type is clear and legible. Occasionally my brain will run ahead of my fingers and I'll miss out words or put the wrong ones in when autocorrect collapses two half words in a new single one. You've probably all seen them in posts from me. It's also why I rarely post from my phone or iPad, because the typing interface on those devices is just too much hard work for me. I can read properly formatted text because I've trained myself to be able to do it. However when confronted with something like the OP my brain simply shuts down, and I have to move on. Luckily for me it is only occasionally a problem, and I've only had to block a few posters here and on other forums because everything they type sends my brain into meltdown trying to decipher it. The OP is not dyslexic. They are either too lazy or too stupid to take the time to try and communicate in a clear manner. And because they haven't done that, they have run into problems. I also feel sorry for anyone who has to try and unravel what has been written. I wouldn't want to deal with someone like that on eBay (or anywhere else) either. It only takes 10 minutes with a book or a decent quality newspaper, to realise that you do not format text like the OP has done, so why do people still persist in putting spaces before punctuation symbols, typing everything as a continuous stream of consciousness without breaking it up into neat paragraphs? If you can't take the time to make your post legible, I certainly can't take the time to try and work out what you are saying.
    3 points
  6. I think you should take the time and patience to point out why xgsjx is wrong, because I think he's pretty much hit the nail on the head.
    3 points
  7. Sometime I think I'm the only fool 65 year old with the same spirit for gigging I had when I was 12. I'd be in heaven if I had gigs 4 nights a week. I love late nights, love the club bar scene, love the money and most of all the attention. I must have signed 5 CDs and several gig posters this past Saturday night. I love that kind of stuff. Blue
    2 points
  8. Yes it's a looky-likey. With regard to the mod, weirdly I have carved up my older Telebass because it is more road-worn and had been modded anyway for another pickup but the Blueflower is all pristine and it feels sacrilegious to start digging away at it! I have the tools, routers and the skills. As you say, I will know it is there, even if it is obscured. I have another pickup which may be a bit hotter and would have no qualms about swapping that but harming those flowers seems cruel. They are real flowers....
    2 points
  9. TBH almost every broadcast radio station tends to repeat itself. Stick with 6 Music for a couple of weeks and you'll be just as fed up with hearing the same songs over and over.
    2 points
  10. Of course, that's different - guitarists have always been a lot more deluded than bass players. Anyway, I've got a brand new car and it's made me a really good driver, so there!
    2 points
  11. 2 points
  12. But in face to face spoken communication no one would be allowed to ramble on like the OP. It would be broken up into more digestible/intelligible chunks by questions and other interruptions. And informal shouldn't also mean incomprehensible.
    2 points
  13. For me GAS : 1: Its the hope that the next thing is better than the existing thing and might make me play and sound better than the last thing with less effort on my behalf to make that so, because the new thing is that much better. Some things I see in the basses and bass equipment for sale ads instigate an instance " Maybe if I get that I could get, or at least close to, that sound that ........ gets. " Like watching Tal Wilkenfield and wanting a Sadowsky or Marcus and wanting a MM Jazz and so on. Its like there could be some instant fix to bass tone problems that the regular gig throws up due to the room ect ect. 2: Its purley being inquisitive. You don't know till you try so you must try. 3: Nostalgia That's my take on it. A story....true story. ( Sorry its one of my essays) A few weeks ago I went to check out a Status I'd seen advertised. I was curious to see what it would be like more than anything and the price was well within reach. The GAS for it was probably because I've seen and heard many a good player use one to great effect so there was a bit of "if it works for all those guys..." Anyway it turned out it wasn't for me and my GAS for that particular model has been satisfied. Whilst I was there the seller casually mentions he has a few Wals, an Alembic and few other top shelf basses hanging around and would I like to check em out? I'm now fearful of a GAS overload and maybe I'd better not. It could be depressing going home to my trusty Jazz having played these. But the result was I actually didnt like the 4 or 5 string Wals, the Alembic or the 4 string Status. I liked the 5 string Status from a certain point of view but not enough that I really needed one in my life any time soon. All of these basses would have up to that point been on my wish list and any bassporn pictures of them would have me drooling. I was completely not taken aback with any of them. If anything I found them surprisingly uninspiring. All these years wanting any one of these. I left there feeling quite good about it. I am not suggesting in any way these are bad basses, just not what I personally expected them to be. They could be sonic Nirvana and the bass of a life time for some or most but TBH I prefer my Fender over them. Maybe when I was younger I wouldn't have known the difference because I didn't have the experience or knowledge about what works for me best. Neck width, balance, string height, weight ect... probably wouldn't have bothered me back then. I would have in my early days of bassingdom , fuelled by GAS, usually because its the latest thing in bass fashion, taken an instrument and struggled to get it to sound like I thought it would sound and moved it on when it didn't. I wouldn't of known about how the width of a neck can help or hinder me or that active is not really my thing back then. Same thing with amps and cabs.
    2 points
  14. I like the idea of the 'Drag' control. - I'd love to be able to adjust the flamboyance of my stage costume mid song.
    2 points
  15. There may be a few reasons why your luthier can't get the action any lower. The fact he hasn't told you what his reason is on your bass might indicate he's either: 1 - Not interested in working on your bass. 2 - Not much good at communicating. 3 - Lacks skills. Problems that can limit how low the action can go can include: 1 - The nut being high - solution: file the slots. 2 - The bridge won't adjust low enough - solution - shim the neck. 3 - Lowering the action further causes fret rattle. This can be because the tops of the frets are uneven (as discussed earlier in this thread) - solution level the frets. 4 - Truss-rod problems meaning the relief can't be set low enough. Solution - work to address this issue, which may mean major work. We can't really say a lot more about this without seeing the bass. A Yamaha bass should be pretty well made, for a mass-produced production line item made by people who've been trained to do the job to meet a need of the factory to work to a defined specification level. The problem with any bass made in these conditions is nobody who made your bass is actually a luthier. Wood is wood. Yamaha may buy good wood but wood moves in the process of drying out and aging and a visit to a good luthier may be needed from time to time. This is especially true if the bass you picked up is a "Friday night" item from the production line. As I said in an earlier post; taking it to an experienced Basschatter, who knows basses might be a good start. Here's the thread with a list:
    2 points
  16. 'Chemical Weapons, fine. Nukes, great. But even in the face of utter destruction we will never stoop to deploying weapons such as these against our enemies'.
    2 points
  17. 2 points
  18. "We will dominate the world... of table tennis"
    2 points
  19. Perhaps, but sadly a complete non-starter for me; since to learn said basslines would involve also having to endure Morrissey's voice. In short; a step way too far.
    2 points
  20. I liked Gladiator by Hans Zimmer and particularly the tracks with Lisa Gerard on. Blackhawk Down was also in the same vein.
    2 points
  21. The Gig with Dream Tröll was a massive success, we almost hit the venue cap. Made tons of cash and paid every band and I'm 80 quid up. A fantastic night all round.
    2 points
  22. "For sale my beloved <bass/amp/cab etc.>"
    2 points
  23. Strong word isn't it? Hate? A couple of years ago I had a dream (nightmare) that I was driving around my locale, visiting friends, in a clapped out old Austin Metro. The jalopy in question had been finished in tobacco sunburst by a previous, semi-professional, pensionable rock guitar wombler, who needed to express his intrinsic love of everything rock and/or metal to absolutely everybody he passed on the street. I'd found myself the owner by virtue of being unable to afford anything else. Each body panel had individually been resprayed tobacco sunburst... the roof, wings, doors, hatch and bonnet each had that brown middle moving into red and then to black along its edges. The stanchions that held up the roof were black, as were the bumpers. I woke up and was awoken to a basic internal disgust for any guitar with a burst finish. At first, I thought it a mildly amusing figment of my imagination, one that I would soon forget. But I can't. My dislike tobacco sunburst has since extended to any type of burst finish, surpassing my previous best dislike of coffee table basses... even more that the nausea I feel when I see quilted maple, which looks to me like baby has just vomited a Farley's Rusk on my shoulder. I despise it. I see perfectly good basses that I'd like perhaps to own, but couldn't entertain the thought of buying just because of their finish. Is it just me? What is my problem?
    1 point
  24. Not sure if this has been posted before, but I saw this today. Enjoy, fellow StingRay enthusiasts.
    1 point
  25. He’s never played it 🤣 edit - I am proud of him though 😉
    1 point
  26. this is my lads HB shorty in blue - forgive the football reference...
    1 point
  27. Too pleased to actually post photos...must be a beaut...
    1 point
  28. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter. Don't need the Demeter.
    1 point
  29. I think I addressed the informal/incomprehensible dichotomy in my final sentence. I agree, however, that normal conversation is something involving a minimum of two participants, who will interrupt, make sounds indicating agreement/disagreement, elicit comments, etc Internet communication is a relatively new form of personal interaction, and the ground rules have yet to be established, I think.
    1 point
  30. An Australian, perhaps..?
    1 point
  31. If you look at Bill's graphs it's fairly easy to see what is happening. Stuffing the ports to block their output cuts the deep bass by 3dB roughly. Cutting the bass makes everything else clearer, just as rolling off the treble makes your bass 'bassier' on top of that deep bass often sets off room resonances which can muddy the sound. We don't hear those very low frequencies that well anyway so don't miss them that much, in our studio recordings recently I cut everything below 50Hz form the bass, you could barely hear the difference on the isolated bass (sadly the filter added no talent) but it cleaned up the overall mix nicely especially on the sort of small speakers potential bookers are likely to listen to. You'd think that the more bass the better, but it ain't always so. Part of the 'sound' of the speaker, I'd argue easily the most important part is how it portrays the bits we can hear well, the mids. It may well be the Berg does mids similarly to the Trace, so happy days. Equally it may be that the lack of deep bass is an advantage in terms of clarity and punch, as I've explained above. Bill's response curves are of the same driver in sealed v's ported cabs, it's quite possible to choose a driver and design a ported cab which will have a bottom end that rolls off in a very similar way to the sealed cab in his example. The bass handling of a speaker is the combination of both the nature of the driver and the design of the cab The final part of the puzzle is that what we hear depends upon how our ears and brains work together to interpret sound. What we hear as bass is often sounds above 100Hz. Just turning up the mids and treble makes us think there is less bass. Our ears are so insensitive to 30Hz for instance that even if the speaker is good in that area we won't notice a 30Hz filter because all the other sounds in music drown it out anyway. It may well sound deeper if you port it and how it sounds to you and anyone else is what matters, not the output at one particular frequency. In this case however I kind of see what Ashdown are saying but I don't think it's helpful. If you go back to Bill's graphs then that is what they are predicting will happen with your cab. The speaker won't be any different above 200Hz as Bill says so it won't be louder. In his first graph you'll see just a touch more bass around 80Hz which you will notice (the exact frequencies boosted will be different in the Ashdown) but you'll get better power handling in the bottom octave which Bill shows in the bottom graph, so when you turn it up you'll be able to make more bass noise before it distorts with the ports. I'd say it will sound bassier to you.
    1 point
  32. I'd need to spend a load more on liposuction and lycra.
    1 point
  33. Don't be lazy, find some different venues!
    1 point
  34. Playing somewhere twice a month has got to be unusual hasn't it ? I suppose we're guilty of not changing the set often, mainly because it works, but we'll only do 2 gigs a year at any particular venue
    1 point
  35. Any love for the new Acne* Burst colour scheme? *Soon to be released in America under the name of Zit Burst.
    1 point
  36. I don’t need one of these, but PMT have the rack mount version on sale at £549 which seems like a genuinely good price reduction? As I say, I don’t need one. Must keep repeating that...
    1 point
  37. This is the new cheese slicer your dynasty.
    1 point
  38. Yes, i think this will fit all the way up Trumps hoop to about...mmmmmm there.
    1 point
  39. Never knew those existed. I'm off to Amazon! Thanks
    1 point
  40. I agree 100%, we had some 50 year old coke heads at our gig on Saturday, they think they are great and providing the entertainment, they're not.
    1 point
  41. Well, it's getting closer. The last bits always take an age but I'd be surprised if I can't finish it this week. Final weight, putting everything left to fit on the digital scales, is looking like a touch under 5 1/4 lbs
    1 point
  42. or - Brand new, I've only had it for three months...
    1 point
  43. 1 point
  44. My old Trace AH200 running at 4 ohms was loud enough for most pub gigs without PA support and I rarely went past 2 on the main volume output.
    1 point
  45. Body shielding. Before: And after: Used materials - Copper tape and graphite paint.
    1 point
  46. 1 point
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