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Kev

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Posts posted by Kev

  1. 15 minutes ago, Duroc17 said:

    I know the exchange rate isn’t great but $1299 is £1087ish Fender have been doing this in UK for a few years now seeing same £ and $ price which is another rip off unless it’s Brexit related import duty 

    Its just the usual mark up for the non-US markets.  They all do it, its just the norm now.  Its not a Brexit thing though, no different exporting to UK and EU.

    • Like 1
  2. Dunlop DVP5 Volume / Expression pedal

     

    Lovely pedal, great that you can use it for expression or volume.  Been sitting alongside my Quad Cortex on my board since purchase but in truth it doesn't get used, mostly used as a place to put my foot for stage poses!  Perfect size for a smaller board, a halfway point between the huge DVP3 and tiny DVP4.

     

    Great condition, a little velcro residue on the bottom but otherwise all good.  Will come boxed.  Shipped via 48h courier included.  Can get better pics if needed. Cheers!

     

    https://www.pmtonline.co.uk/dunlop-dvp5-volume-pedal-junior

     

    80621_2.jpg.c404c8211ad3374eae9f01e186312719.jpg

     

    20220724_141738.thumb.jpg.41615364d7e4b8152548ebc2c90ffb3f.jpg

     

    • Like 2
  3. 1 hour ago, nilorius said:

    For those who thought bad and silly for my compression discuss - agree and let You think i was wrong and you where right. Now i let some hours at internet to know what compression really does. Yes - I was a big fool, but finally would say that compression is not for me. I hope this will end those attack coments.

    Are you talking about live use, or compression in general? And have you ever recorded music, or been recorded?

  4. 21 hours ago, nilorius said:

    No? Then what for compression is built? It evens the louder and quiter sound to one volume level (depends on settings). Anyway - compression is more for guitars than basses.

    Chat to an audio engineer about how he uses compression for bass and mixes in general, and believe me, he will.  To say you don't need it as you can control it with your fingers is just as the other member put it really, not accurate.

    • Like 6
  5. No experience with a bongo, but I did not find the Stingray Special 18v pre to be especially hot.  The 18v is only headroom really, and at extremes of EQ it may be louder.  The Neomydium humbucker is more likely responsible for the clout, but nothing the Scarlett shouldn't be able to handle.

  6. 1 hour ago, Burns-bass said:

     

     

     

    Seeing prices rising steadily suggests that they're a good investment (you won't lose money with a Wal, etc) when, again, this isn't necessarily true.

     

     

     

    Given the frankly ludicrous levels used Wal basses have reached, I feel the price will crash in the medium term future.  Find one still being sold for £4k ala 5 years ago and that'll be a tidy investment.  But I can't see how they can possibly balloon higher or even stay where they are for long, unless he closes up shop for good.

  7. 11 minutes ago, Rich said:

    Please tell me that this isn't going to turn into yet another "how can Wals possibly be worth it" thread.

     

     

    I was in dire financial straits a few years back and came within an ace of putting my beloved Wal up for sale purely for the money. I knew I couldn't do it when simply writing the advert made me blub. Thank got I didn't, it's doubled in value since then.

    Turn into?  It's literally how the thread began :lol:

    • Haha 3
  8. 8 minutes ago, LukeFRC said:

    I can - if I want a wal bass 4 years is very long time to wait.

    Longer than that for the possibility that I might be able to get on an order list to wait 4 years at an increasing price…. If I had the money I’m just buying a secondhand one at whatever price…. In 5 years I might be dead, have no money or who knows… either you are musically be in need of a Wal or financially it’s not an issue and then you will get one.

     

    that says I’m not in the bracket of being able to afford!

    If everyone had my attitude, Wal basses would still be £3k used and you may have been able to afford ;) 

  9. 13 minutes ago, BigRedX said:

     

    The order book is currently closed due to the fact that the current backlog is in excess of 4 years. It says so on their contact page. You can ask to be informed when Wal will be taking orders again, but I suspect that if you aren't ready to put down your deposit on the day that it does re-open you are going to be out of luck. 

     

    Therefore you want a Wal right now you have no alternative but to negotiate a price on one of those 9 up for sale. The fact that they are all still available to buy means that they are currently priced on the high side, but I'm sure there would be some wiggle room on price for anyone with actual cash to spend. Also bear in mind that those 9 Wal basses available for sale are a mixture of fretted, fretless, left hand, right hand, 5 string, 4 string etc. So while there are 9 to choose from if you need a particular set of features that cuts down the choice by at least half straight away.

    Ah I can see you have to expand the dropdown, or at least on my browser.  So, you're added to a waiting list, and they'll contact you when you can order.  So my point remains unchanged really.  I just can't relate to that level of impatience I suppose!

     

    16 minutes ago, admiralchew said:

    A similar thing is happening with Noble Pres. As soon as one is delivered it is worth more because there’s a year long wait or a big up-charge to get one in six weeks. Like basses with long wait times, some of it is the impatience factor. I suppose basses are a bit different though as Nobles all work the same way whereas someone after a bass may want different woods or finishes that can’t be had from Reverb and the like.

    True, but Wal basses today are built in almost the exact same way as they were 30 years ago, which is why it differs so much from value attributed to vintage Fenders and the like.  It isn't disputed by any Wal owner that the current build are at least equal to the builds of old, albeit you get the occasional chancer who tries to ask more for one built by Ian Waller, but doesn't really succeed IME.

     

    And noble preamps are a whole other discussion :lol:

  10. It's just reached this uniquely silly position that anyone taking delivery of their new Wal bass in January will instantly make a sizeable profit if they wanted to sell it on.  I just don't really know who is buying them at this price, and what their justification is. 

     

    Has anyone on here paid £10k+ for a used Wal who can fill us in?

     

    Again, the comparison with Fender and investment calls back to value attributed to it being a vintage instrument, which doesn't apply here.  There are hundreds more Wals in the world now compared to 10 years ago, whereas there will likely be hundreds less 70s Fenders due to their advancing age.

  11. 52 minutes ago, pineweasel said:

    They are relatively rare. And crucially, you can't just "buy one right now". The order book is closed, there's a four year wait for those with orders, and the new price started at around £6000 the last time I looked. Scarcity is driving up used values.

    Is the book closed?  I wasn't actually aware of that, didn't see anything on the order form on their website?  But if so, its still a patience thing (you missed off the bit about waiting for years on my quote).  The point is, if you want a Wal, you can get one, its just a matter of how much time you want to wait.  But the end result is getting one, its a certainty.  You don't have that with vintage or actually "rare" instruments.  I'd totally understand the value of Wals going crazy if they closed the workshop, but they haven't.  But if they have closed their book, that may be contributing, but when the real boom happened they were certainly still taking orders.

  12. 1 hour ago, Burns-bass said:

     

    They're directly comparable. 70s Fender were worth almost nothing (I used to import late 70s Fenders from the States for £350 a time). They increased in value recently, as the interest in vintage guitars has grown and people have considered them a safe investment vehicle. Their value isn't about playability, sound, weight, or refinement (because they all score pretty low on all those factors, objectively speaking), but perceived value and investment potential. Check out how many vintage guitar dealers have completed changed their view on these instruments. They're now pushing them out to people who assume that vintage = value. Why? Because most of the good condition pre-CBS stuff is in the hands of collectors and they need to keep earning. 

     

    The same dark forces are pumping up the value of these instruments. (New basses are subject to market forces, including increases in raw material costs, transport, production, etc.) None of these affect Wal. Dealers work between themselves to pump an asset and inflate prices. That's what's happening here, and will happen again.

    The primary driving factor behind the value of 70s Fenders is in the name; they are the value they are because of the era they were built in and their age.  Take a Wal bass that was built in 2019 and another built in 1989, second hand value now will be very similar, but if anything the 2019 will go for more.  The Wal value is nothing to do with its vintage, but with Fender its everything to do with that.  I just don't see how they compare at all.

  13. 7 minutes ago, Woodinblack said:

     

    Of course it is the same to vintage fenders. A few years ago you couldn't give a 70s fender away, and now they go for crazy prices. There are certainly many orders of magnitudes more 70s and 80s fender basses than wals in their entire run. They can't be considered even slightly rare and you can buy a fender without waiting built the same way and save a fair bit.

     

    Obviously there are changes in the last 6 years or so that have added to 50% of the price to stuff, the fact our money is worth a lot less, but there is still a false idea of rare driving those prices up.

    Its honestly nothing like vintage Fenders.  Their value is wholly attributed to their age and era, neither of which has any significant impact on the price of a Wal. 

  14. 13 hours ago, Woodinblack said:

    I am not sure why it is an issue - if you have £12k for a wal, buy it, you aren't hurting anyone, you aren't forcing other people to pay more for something. It is a crazy price to pay for something like that, but so are vintage fenders etc, all the time people buy them they will go up. 

    It's not an "issue", its just a bizarre curiosity.  Its nothing like comparing them to vintage Fenders.  They're not rare, they're not disontinued, you can buy a Wal, built in exactly the same way, right now, and you'd save thousands.  You would just need to wait a few years.  I can't imagine being so impatient and so wasteful with money, especially in these times, but obviously some people are happy to do it.  Just so odd.

  15. Probably the biggest reason I don't own a C4 is because I can't easily trigger it with my Quad Cortex.  This is still a faff, but if its really keenly priced, I mean realllllly keenly, it may be tempting.

     

    Wasn't there talk of the C4 being upgrade to a full sized pedal with proper midi ports?

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