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Showing content with the highest reputation on 26/03/24 in all areas

  1. Good idea, I've done that -- she sends her thanks to you all.
    10 points
  2. Social media is society's cess pit. The very worst of human personality flaws are allowed to flourish and grow there without any kind of consequence and, as a result, it just gets worse and worse. Do yourself a huge favour and remove yourself from it, forget it exists.
    9 points
  3. Boring update from me (at least my wife struggled to feign interest). I got some longer screws for my bridge so I can intonate properly without the saddle being partially beyond the length of the screw. This necessitated a lot of research into the correct type, for which Fender were quite helpful but beaten to the punch by someone on Talkbass. If you look at most vintage mustangs you’ll see that the screws are not long enough to offer much adjustment, particularly in the D and G strings. Perhaps this is why the bridge is a tad further forward on reissues, who knows. Anyway the correct screws are Phillips UNC 6-32 2-1/2inch (or 2 inch for E and A). Exciting 😜
    8 points
  4. The bass has several dings here and there as you would expect but no nasty chips, at some point in its life some numpty replaced the bridge pickup with a standard Jazz one but luckily he kept the original which has now been installed, the only thing is you can just about see the rout edge but as its black you wont see from a distance, does not affect the performance of the bass and its all original with no other modifications. Other than that in good overall condition and getting hard to come by now, one of the best Yamaha have made IMHO Frets are in good shape, truss rod is fine and electrics working as they should. It will be shipped in the top quality Yamaha bass case which is new ( £169 ), strap locks fitted and the mono strap with the buttons will be included which cost about £60. Price to include delivery to UK addresses
    7 points
  5. Rickenbacker 4003s upgraded to V63 spec with Rickenbacker Horseshoe pickup and Rickenbacker 00031 Bass Toaster pickup, Vintage scratch plate and Vintage truss rod cover, superb neck on this bass featuring single truss rod with flat D profile, very nice grain on the fret board, looks very vintage with the skunk stripe, new bridge, single jack output, 2023 model.sounds and plays fantastic , action is currently low without fret buzz. Includes Rickenbacker hard case and original shipping box. would prefer pickup in person but willing to ship if you want to arrange a courier. £2800 No trades thanks. Bass weight 4.4kg. WITHDRAWN. my feedback on BC.
    7 points
  6. It's finished, again. Still not totally happy with the envelope filter, but it's the best small one I've found. I'd like a noise gate, but there's no room...
    6 points
  7. Its so your flag doesn't get a crease down the middle where the cabs would otherwise meet.
    5 points
  8. yep been there also, you would not believe some of the stories i can tell of .... timewasters, scammers, people taking the pi$$, buyers that dont live in the uk, people asking stupid questions, people that have not read the description, people asking will i deliver half the country away people that do not turn up even though you waited in for them people asking 10 questions for days then "its ok iv found another one" people sending you dodgy links people asking you to swap for this, then sending you a dodgy link people asking for your address and contact number then radio silence. people offering a courier to collect with cash. people whos mum really want it but he is working off shore on an oil rig peoples buying for a son or daughter cus its their birthday they can pay but are out the country. people then when you click their profile have pics surrounded by palm trees, and live abroard people that are a pastor and want you to send to a friend yep facebook is rife with scammers, you have to be cautious. and can be a real pain in the crack. on saying all that, once you can navigate the minefield, i have met loads of really nice buyers and sellers. and the best bit.... no Ebay fees ! .... but at the cost of all the sh!t you have to put up with. my rule number 1,.... if it has to be sent....i dont except paypall, only bank transfer for obvious reasons. and if collecting its cash ONLY !
    5 points
  9. Sadly it's the world we live in. There are some wonderful, amazing human beings out there but there are equally some complete and utter tool's with toilet paper for brains. They walk among us and we sadly come in contact with them now and again.
    5 points
  10. Wow! Just look at it! Lush ebony fingerboard, smooth and sensual matt neck-through, great pickups, gentle fan frets which take about one nanosecond to get used to, all hand crafted in Germany with master-grade precision and attention to detail by Gerald Marleaux. When you see video of their workshop, there's no computers or CNC in sight, just an old bandsaw and a lot of chisels and rasps ... serious, high quality German chisels and rasps of course ... I love the grain of the maple neck and the ash wings, don't you? The way it just .flows. ... This fine bass has to find a new owner as I'm reverting back to 4 strings (having been on a very happy decade-long journey through 8, 6, and 5 string basses). Purchased new from Thomann in 2023, I am obviously taking a major hit on this but hey ho I went in with my eyes open. Snap up a bargain while you can. Body: Brushed Ash Neck: Maple Fretboard: Ebony Controls: Vol, Pan, Active Bass Mid Treble, singlecoil/serial/parallel switches, passive/active switch Neck: Multiscale 34-35" Construction: Neck Through Bridge: ETS Tuners: Schaller Case: Gig Bag (I know, WTF? But many high-end makers are only suppling gig bags these days, and it is a very nice one ...) Colour: Satin Blackburst Current List Price: £4694 (See options pricelist image) Condition: Like New Cash on Collection from Caterham, Surrey or willing to meet up up to an hour away.
    4 points
  11. It's not quite day 1 of the project as I've spent a while doing research. I play mandocello in a renaissance-folk-rock band. I have two mandocellos - both acoustic with pickups, both really quite loud. I started off thinking an all-electric would be good for quiet practice, but the more I looked at donor electric guitars the more I thought I wanted to work on a more 'rock' sound. So today I bought this 6-string donor. In red, devil horns shaped body, in the Angus Young / Epiphone SG style. Rather than a full 8-string mandocello, I'm going with a single C string on the bottom, so the tuning will be C-GG-DD-AA. The plan: remove three tuners on the lower side of the head. Dowel the holes, make good & re-drill for four tuners - making 3 on the top, 4 on the bottom. make a new 7 groove nut New bridge & saddle - probably modified bass parts New larger pickguard to surround the new pickups TBD: Pickups. Hofner bass pickups and Telecaster neck bar pickups are on my list Edit to add: I fall in the "expectant customer" category. I'm doing as much of the work as I can, but the skilled work will be done by my local guitar technician.
    4 points
  12. This is an incredibly high quality, lightweight FRFR speaker and is as far as I know the first used LFSys speaker to come up for sale. I'm only selling my Silverstone because it is geting no use; none of my current bands use back line and I also own an LFSys Monaco. The Silverstone has a warmer tone and I marginally prefer the leaner sound of the Monaco so the Silverstone has only been used at a couple of gigs and rehearsals. It is in nearly new condition. This cab has a top hat fitted for PA use and was once part of a pair specially modified by LFSys as emergency PA speakers. Honestly I was never going to need a pair, these things are loud enough for any band on their own. I'm happy to remove the top hat and fill the hole if you prefer. I've put up a picture from LFSys as a place holder and I'll put up more pics of the actual cab later this week. For those who don't know LFSys use a high quality, long throw bass driver with a magnet which would have to be massively heavy if it weren't made of Neodymium alloy. Neo magnets allow the use of a longer coil with high efficiency but without the penalty of a super heavy cab. The horn driver is of PA quality and much better than anything used in the vast majority of bass cabs. The horn itself is larger than most and is cast aluminium. it is also rotated 90deg and crossed over at a lower frequency so that the mid and high frequencies of your bass are directed towards you even when standing close to the cab. You can get the full story at the LFSys website . The sound is the sound of your bass, neutral but rich and warm. It sounds like your bass but through a good quality PA system. Because of the attention paid to the crossover and horn the midrange is much better than you will hear from just about any other bass speaker and because ot the long throw driver and highly braced cab it will handle bass better than all but the most expensive of PA speakers. Better still is that you will get to hear all that goodness on stge because of the control of dispersal from that lovely horn flare. Bullet points are: Power: 300W AES Sensitivity: 97db/W @1m Impedance: 8ohms Frequency Range: 40-18kHz Size: 57x39x32cm Weight: 13.5kg I'd prefer you to come and try the cab and take it away but I'm happy to pack and post if you can't get down here.
    4 points
  13. once a buyer asked me to deliver an item (giant bean bag!). I put it in the car and drove to their flat. I rang the bell and…. They switched the lights off, closed the curtains and pretended they weren’t there. It was actually quite funny. What was less funny was the guy messaging me again asking for details and if he could pick it up. People are genuinely mad.
    4 points
  14. For me, the bass is the bridge between rhythm and melody. That's where it should stay to complement the song. When players come out of this pocket, that's what turns me off. I hate w***ing of any kind over a piece of music, be it bass, vocals or even gratuitous overly played guitar.
    4 points
  15. £300 including hard case Fantastic solid bass with great Japanese craftsmanship, 9-piece ash/maple/walnut body, three-piece maple neck and rosewood fingerboard. Active circuit has a centre detent. Turn one way to boost bass, turn the other to boost treble. The passive tone keeps working during this, allowing for everything from Dub Reggae to the Stranglers. Passive / Active switch. This also works as a kill switch if you take out the battery and use it passive for thirty years like I did. One final toggle switch has broken off. I never knew what it did (not much) but it could easily be replaced with a switchcraft replacement and a little soldering. One small chip on the body (repaired) by the electronics cavity, and one little ding on the side of the fretboard -- useful for finding the third fret by feel on a dark stage 🙂 Not bad for a 44 year old ... Currently strung with Rotosound Swing Bass 66 which have been on for about 23 years so just starting to settle in. Another few years and they will be bedded in nicely. I have never touched the action, intonation or truss rod as it is always just right. It's been tuned once a year, whether it needed it or not. I just checked and gave the truss rod a quarter turn one way and then back again and it was very stiff but it does move. 4.3kg 19mm string spacing One owner since new -- I bought this from Kingfisher Music in 1983 for £155 with the case which according to the Bank of England is £636.78 in today's money ... however feels much better quality than £600 instruments are today ... outstanding value ... Cash on Collection from Caterham, Surrey or willing to meet up up to an hour away.
    3 points
  16. In my write up of my home-made fretted bass, I mentioned that the original neck I mad earmarked for it was damaged by a badly behaved bandsaw. This is the story of what I did with that damaged neck blank. For about two years, that neck blank sat propped up against the wall in the attic. I had a vague idea of making a headless bass with it, even though I've never been a huge fan of headless instruments (this is before their sudden renaissance really got going). However, I'd looked at how much decent headless bass hardware cost and scampered away with my tail between my legs. (A Hipshot bridge/headpiece set costs like £400, which was more than I was planning on spending on the whole project). Then, one day, I stumbled across someone (perhaps of this parish) selling a set of ABM individual bridge-tuner units and a hand-made brass headpiece for £100 on eBay. I snapped them up because that's about £200 less than they would have cost new, and this was during the pandemic, so no-one had new ones in stock anyway. With this stuff delivered, I made some measurements and started working on a design. My main priority was that I wanted to have the tuners easily acessible without having them hanging off the back, or having the body cut inwards to make them acessible. Like the odd annulus things on some Alembics – I've always thought those access cutaways give your bass a sort of flabby cloaca thing. Below is the design I settled on. My thinking was that without a headstock to counterbalance, I could dispense with the top horn, and if I followed the staggered angle of the bridge units with the lower edge of the body, I could handle tuner accessibility with a routed-out recess. The little shape in the upper bout was going to be either an inlay or a soundhole-like thing – I hadn't decided which, but I felt it needed something there for visual balance. The idea was that this would be a two-piece ash body with a walnut top. The ash would be chambered to keep the weight down. It was to have simple passive electronics and cheap jazz pickups because I wasn't sure about the integrity of headpiece, and didn't know how I'd go about replacing it if it didn't work, so I bought all my parts with the possibility in mind that the whole thing might be a bust. I'll continue this tomorrow, but I should note up top that I took far fewer pictures of the process of making this bass than I did with my other one. I think this was because it was the spring of 2021, and I was in an Omicron-lockdown fugue state. That means this write-up will probably be a bit more concise than the last one (it didn't require a "15 years earlier" prologue, so that's a good start).
    3 points
  17. After a recent thread where I asked for string cleaner recommendations I have done some more research, taken as much advice as I can and come up with a solution. It seems to be the case that most string cleaner products are essentially mineral oil, sometimes with a little extra scent. However, if that's the case then £8-£10 for a few ml of mineral oil seemed like a bad deal to me, so I figured I'd do it for myself. 500ml mineral oil £7.99 (about 100x cheaper than any commercial string cleaner by volume) 5 lint free cloths £3.99 2 marijuana tins £7.99 In other words, for somewhere about the price of 2 lots of commercial string cleaner you can get two infinitely refillable tins, enough cloths to last ages, and enough oil to refill the whole shebang 25 times over. Nice! I poured a few ml into each tin, stuck the cloth in there so it got nice and soaked and put one in my office where I play bass and one in my gig kit bag. It's been about a week now and so far it's working just as well as anything I've ever used. Which is to say that the strings feel shiny if you wipe before you play and then they still feel a little shiny next time you pick them up if you wipe them down after you play. I'm not entirely convinced that any of these products inherently make your strings 'last' longer before going dead, but it can't hurt, right?
    3 points
  18. I forgot to post final pictures. Such an amateur.
    3 points
  19. I've been tweaking various bits to try and make sure it's tunable and that I don't fix into the design, things that are wrong. I've printed a few neck pockets, adjusted the height slightly so that when I follow the tuning guide that @SamIAm posted three pages earlier. The bass plays well in the lower frets but I still feel the strings are too high when I get to the dusty end of the neck. However I discovered that small changes in the truss rod do work, so I'm a lot happier. I feel that I might be getting to the stage where I'm tweaking for tweaking sake and not actually progressing the build. I have all the bits printed now and am focussing on the pickups and mounting them. I spent a few days messing around with body mounting the pickups but the height limitations of the pickup area means this is hard. I'm playing with a few mm here and there. This is due to three simple measurements, the aluminium backbone 15mm, the printed central spine, 10mm, and the maximum depth of the body 44mm. This gives me a depth 19mm, plus the height from the top of the body to the strings, in which to mount a pickup. Its hard work to design a pickup that connects to the body securely but also has enough movement to lower and raise as needed. So I'm now going back to mounting it on the pickguard and will (possibly) use some lightweight foam to dampen it. I may well steal the design from my six string to do all of this This means I'm now into getting the control panel fitted using a Squier set of pots and pickups just to get things going. I have other ideas for the control panel, but I want to get it going first before the mad ideas come into play. So things to do now: 1. Design a functional pickguard for the body. 2. Design a functional pickguard for the control panel. This means I'm going to have to glue things together <shock horror>. 3. Put the low tension strings on to replace the tug boat strings. Thanks Rob
    3 points
  20. @ped please lock my thread. It has become an argument-a-thon.
    3 points
  21. Bass now withdrawn from sale. Played it last night, and it was incredible. What on earth was I thinking!?!
    3 points
  22. That Yolk Isn't Runny Any More ~ The Smïths
    3 points
  23. I've just snagged a used green one for £500 on ebay from a local seller I've bought off before. His basses are usually set up with the lowest action of any I've ever played so dying to get my hands on it tonight.
    3 points
  24. It looks interesting? TBH for the size of venues that these bands are playing on-stage amplification will make zero contribution to what the audience hears, and depending on how the monitoring is configured somewhere between zero and very little to what the musicians hear, so they might as well do something interesting with how the backline is arranged. For all we know the cabs are stage props only.
    3 points
  25. Facebook marketplace seems to bring out the worst in people. Just this weekend, I ended up staying in for a buyer that never turned up, no response to messages even though they'd been hassling for about a week with loads of silly questions and to arrange the collection time. I'd put off other buyers and changed weekend plans. I just can't fathom what's going through their heads to be such time wasters and so inconsiderate.
    3 points
  26. Love Me Three Times - The Doors
    3 points
  27. Well, it seems we're at an impasse...
    3 points
  28. OK round one of the carving is complete. I left it 1mm thicker everywhere on purpose in order to give me a chance to see how the carving was going without risking it getting too thin. Time to get serious. I routed the perimeter down to 4mm, it's final thickness. Time to crack out the gouge and mini plane again. I'm not finding it easy planing it without getting tearout. Wood is like cats fur, it want's to go in one direction. Get it it wrong and the blade can get out under the fibres and pull out a chunk. Carving it is like butter, till suddenly it isn't. It's also a second grade piece of wood, so there's lot's of grain runout, making tearout even more difficult. So far so good though....
    3 points
  29. My latest go at a pedalboard. I am pleasantly surprised at the quality of the X5 effects, but at present no OD hence the MXR (Inserted using the FX loop between the octaver and chorus, the X5 is chained R to L). The X5 tuner does not cope with a low B hence the KORG at the front of the chain. I have a lot more tweaking to do with the settings on each of the X5 toneprints to dial in my 'perfect' sound. And I need to sort a wider board so the KORG is not sideways! (Slight OCD). Sam x
    3 points
  30. Selling my almost new Maruszczyk Elwood L 6 string, 33”scale with Aguilar Aguilar PJ 6 string pickups (no longer in production) - Alder body, beautiful walnut burl top with maple veneer in between and matching headstock. - Maple neck, katalox fingerboard with 24frets. - 16.5mm string spacing at bridge, 54mm nut width. - Passive Vol/blend/tone with on/off switch by the jack - ebony finger ramp - cream pearloid 3ply pickguard. - Has en ebony slap ramp that can be attached when the pickguard is off - only 3.8kg Comes with original gigbag. Bass is custom made from the end of 2022. Asking 1800€ for it (new around 2700€) price drop: 1700€ price drop to 1600€ now
    2 points
  31. The fourth dimension is indeed time. It's best left set to the present moment though, I accidentally gave mine a tweak and I'm not going to see it again until next June.
    2 points
  32. I tried several times to play 6-string guitar and just can't. I tried playing this SG today... still can't. But I bought a mandocello in December 2022 and went from zero to playing a gig in about 4 weeks... they just suit me somehow. I will definitely post a video when it's finished.
    2 points
  33. Home practice rig I'm going to add the Line 6 next to the Impulse.
    2 points
  34. Aguilar Tone Hammer Preamp/Direct Box Used but not abused. With original box and manual (sheet of paper). Bought new by me. Takes 2x9v batteries, phantom power via the DI, or a regular pedalboard 18v. Postage within the UK included in the price. Bargain! Velcro on the bottom - pedalboard-ready... Any questions, just ask. Thanks for looking.
    2 points
  35. I'm sorry to hear you're going through a tough financial patch, and met with a bad FB marketplace experience. As others have said, FB Marketplace can be a hive of scum and villainy. But if you're not in a rush to sell, it's worth wading through the chaff and persevering with. I've sold a number of music and non-music items via FB marketplace, generally all at or close to the price I advertised for, and more than I would have got via eBay. I tend to slightly inflate the asking price knowing someone will make an offer, and I lead my adverts with something along the lines of "first come first served, no silly offers, cash on collection only". It doesn't weed all the scammers and twits out, but it helps. If they do ask, I tell them to read the advert again. FWIW. The questions from prospective buyers annoy me more than anything... "What's your best price?". Have people forgotten how to negotiate? Make me a sensible offer and you'll find out, don't just ask me to offer you a lowball price. "Can you lower the price by £XX as I have to get a train/bus to collect it from you?" Absolutely not. I'm not covering your travel expenses, what do I get out of that? Usually when I've had multiple offers I get: "I can collect it today if you take £XX". As if they're doing me a favour by giving me a lot less than I'm asking for just to take it off my hands quickly. I tell them I have better offers lined up and I'm in no rush to sell.
    2 points
  36. The bazz fuzz kit has arrived. I have no idea what I'm doing. I'll put pics up on here when I have finally done it. In about 2036!
    2 points
  37. Haven’t played a Silverstone but the Monaco and Monza cabs are exceptional. Seems a very fair price for a superb bit of boutique, British engineering.
    2 points
  38. I am familiar with both these basses and there's pros and cons to either. The Fender sounds hefty with the active EQ and P/H pickup configuration. It does classic Fender tone with a bit of a modern twist. It does not however, sound much like a Stingray on the rear humbucker. It's much more of a chunky Fender tone than the typical scooped-out Music Man zing. The early model of that bass ( late90's early 2000's) had a very big chunky neck, but the one pictured looks to have a narrower nut width. It's worth investigating if the neck profile suits you, though. The Bongo is an entirely different proposition. It's a big, beefy and very modern tone with loads of punch and attitude. On the five string model though, I would be aware that the G string is usually very close to the edge of the fingerboard and has a tendency towards slipping off the edge. It's a major irritation to a lot of players, myself included. The 17.5mm string spacing is also a little tight to some people. Other than those idiosyncrasies it's a superb bass. Sounds as good if not better than any modern boutique bass on the market in my opinion. If you specifically want a modern non-Fender kind of sound it's a very good proposition.
    2 points
  39. Dunwich Volt Thrower clone
    2 points
  40. I would dispute that.
    2 points
  41. From my years working as a local Newspaper journo, I learned that sometimes “good enough is good enough.” As in, 250 words by today’s deadline is worth more than 400 words next Thursday afternoon. I don’t think there’s any piece of art or music anywhere whose creator wouldn’t go back and tinker with but there’s a cut off point for me where it becomes diminishing returns - not a better or worse version, just a different version.
    2 points
  42. Some pics arrived from Sat nights gig iin Arbroath at the Royal British Legion Club with BLOCKBUSTARZ. (see earlier post)
    2 points
  43. Another of our semi-regular acoustic duo gigs at The Lookout in Scarborough this evening. Took two basses with me ( Taylor and Ibanez) to compare, but somehow managed to leave my holdall behind which has all my leads, stand and mic in it! Disaster averted though by my guitarist pal having spares, and the venue having a euro lead for my Rumble combo. Anyway, a full house of diners and shed loads of requests. Along with the usual kind of stuff you’d expect a duo like us to play, we also did some we hadn’t done before / for a long time - such as ‘Sir Duke’, ‘Mr Bojangles’ ( which I really don’t like) and ‘Little red rooster’ with my mate using a half pint glass as a slide for his guitar. Ended with ‘Come up and see me’ in tribute to Steve Harley. We return there in three weeks time, when I’ll make sure I have a full compliment of kit with me.
    2 points
  44. First time in Arbroath with BLOCKBUSTARZ last night in Royal British Legion. Sold out again which is always a great morale booster. Audience were up for it from the first song. Lots of people turned up in Glam gear too which is always great to see from the stage. It was so enjoyable we had a contest for best dancer and best glam dresser who both won one of our T shirts. A few others we gave out our new pin badges. Was very warm even with our fans on but air-con units above the stage were firing out warm air all night. We had a smaller upstairs function room to get changed in which was good too. Lot better than a small cupboard sized room that some venues have given us in the past. 4 blokes and a female singer doesn't work in cramped spaces My usual gear, Sandberg VM4 into Ampeg SVT7 and Mesa SW210/115 cabs. Shure wireless unit. Stage a bit boomy even with gramma board it was a bit noticeable. Had to turn the bass EQ down a bit on the amp to clean it up but no big deal. They want to book us for 3 nights in 2025 incl a Xmas gig. Bit of a drive tho 2.5hrs on way there and 3hrs on way home. On way home the roads were quiet but they closed the main M90 right after the Queensferry bridge crossing meaning i had to take a detour. Wasn't home till 4am so by the time i unloaded the car with my bass gear and the 3 way 15" PA cabs it was 4:30am and then a coffee to wind down getting to bed at 5am and back up with a cat banging cupboard doors at 8am. Bit tired this morning to say the least. Probably one of the most enjoyable gigs we've played. Just great fun all night. One or two wee hiccups but nothing we couldn't cover. Dave
    2 points
  45. I got my first real five-string Bought it at the five and dime Played it 'til my fingers bled Was the spring of 1996 It doesn't have quite the same ring to it 😎
    2 points
  46. Give it long enough and every bass player who's ever lived will be in this thread 😀
    2 points
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