[quote name='zawinul' timestamp='1438377107' post='2834171']
i just don;t want it it sounds dead to me, its old and not been at all looked after and I was fleeced...
It hasn't put me off Warwick's, just don't want to have to resurrect one, not for the money I've laid out on it.
If neck can;t be restored i've bought a total dud.... no thanks
[/quote]
I think the lesson here is always view a pre-owned bass before you buy!
I know where you bought this from and the owner is certainly not out to 'fleece' anyone, I have an awful lot of respect for him. At the end of the day, it is a 25 year old bass, the neck's condition is fairly 'usual' for a Warwick of that period (I haven't owned one that hasn't had imperfection from the handmade era, and Iv had a dozen or so). I had an SSII where they put the 1st fret inlay in completely the wrong place, so seemed to fill with wenge dust and refit. Not a neat job but i just put it down as a quirk of the instruments. A battery connecter replacement as John said is pennies.
But, if you feel you have been misold, then take it back. However, if you have already taken £100 compensation for the neck, it is difficult to go back again now! Buyers remorse is not really something a shop should have to deal with, and you should really thoroughly inspect an instrument on arrival and go back to the shop with the issues all at the same time, and not as you discover them. There has to be a line