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pete.young

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Posts posted by pete.young

  1. 21 minutes ago, Brucegill said:

    P

     

    I've certainly gone in a number of times to look at a specific guitar, only to come out with something completely different, that I'd only tried as I could walk around and just have a go. That will never happen for me, if appointments are based on giving them a list of instruments you want to try.

     

     

    That's not how it works - once you're in, you can look round the shop and try what you like. If you do have something in mind beforehand, they'll get it ready for you. Last time I bought a guitar from them, they let me try it in a separate room so other  customers making noise wasn't an issue.

    • Like 2
  2. 38 minutes ago, BassAdder60 said:

    I would add that business was good or appeared to be at Peach and very busy 

     

    I think it was brave business move that will irritate the tyre kickers and usual try stuff but less likely to buy.

     

    We have all done it, popped in for strings and try a guitar or two with no real intention to buy.

     

    The system they run must work as they moved to very large premises which has been set up with a great style and not cheap I would imagine. 
     

    Maybe this is the way ? Certainly worked for me 

     

     The way they run the appointments system isn't onerous. I'm in Ipswich , round trip is about 50 miles so even before the appointment system, I'd ring and check they were open. It's nowhere near a high-street so there are no walk-ins anyway.

     

    The value of their stock is mind-blowing - several millions of pounds and that's just the acoustic guitars.

    • Like 1
  3. Dunno if @51m0n still frequents this forum but I remember the workshop he did on compression at one of the bass bashes. He had a Focusrite unit in a rack, wired into the amp effects loop which was set to Serial in order to compress the entire signal. Sorry but I don't recall which one.

     

    Not sure which part of Essex you're in, if it's the Colchester end I have an old Phonic PCL3200 which you are welcome to borrow to see if you can make it do anything useful.

    • Like 1
  4. 58 minutes ago, Staggering on said:

    As a DB player who also plays tenor banjo I'd have that in a minute if I lived on your side of the Atlantic, I'd love to hear it. Seems like a reasonable price but it would definitely have a limited market.  😊

    As a DB player who also plays tenor banjo and 5-string banjo I wouldn't want to be within 250 miles of it, but each to his own!|

    • Haha 2
  5. This looks similar to my old Musima, it looks like someone has attempted a not-very-good repair using PVA, which has splintered the wood off the side of the neck and stuck it into the socket, and possibly also stuck some of the socket onto the neck sides.  I took the Musima to a local luthier and he came up with 3 options.

     

    Option 1 was so expensive he didn't bother writing it down! I think this was a non-screw option, which may also have involved making a new neck.

     

    Option 2 aka bodge was to clean off the PVA, leave the splintered wood in place and attempt to glue the neck back in place hoping it would still fit reasonably tightly. And then drill the heel and fit 2 long screws through the heel and into the body block, which would provide pretty much all of the strength.

     

    Option 3 was to remove all the splintered wood from neck and socket, clean out all the damage and PVA, glue a thin veneer to the sides of the socket and maple facings to the sides of the neck, and glue it back together. Then fit screws as for option 2, which would be a backup rather than the primary source of strength in the joint.

     

    For me, none of these options made economic sense given the value of the bass.

     

    No idea why there's a 90 degree notch. It looks as though it was done at the time of the previous repair. In the bottom picture you can see an extension of the saw cuts. the only thing I can think of is that the original cap was part of the back, and it splintered off when the original failure happened.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  6. 5 hours ago, Happy Jack said:

    If I could dream up the slightest justification for it, I'd have this. I had one of the first of these that Kris ever sold, even brought him along to the SouthEast BassBash one year so that he could demonstrate his basses.

     

    @Happy Jack, would being in a relatively loud Chicago-style blues band count as the 'slightest justification' ? The Doubler is a massive improvement, but I get the impression that this would largely get rid of feedback and volume issues altogether. Plus it looks cool.

    • Thanks 1
  7. I've just spotted that BBC 4 TV is showing a film called 'The Great Double Bass Race'' at 11.30 pm tonight, 7th January. And hopefully also on iPlayer, it would be about the only thing that isn't if not!

     

    This film tells the story of the first double bass festival on the Isle of Man, in 1978, and features Gary Karr amongst others. I remember watching the film when it was first shown and thinking, I've really got to go to the next one. I still haven't been.

    • Like 5
    • Thanks 2
  8.  @basso navo wht you say makes perfect sense to me.

     

    The question for you is whether a fretless will be edgy and percussive enough for the sound you want to make. If you're thinking of playing slap you're probably going to need a fretted bass. Not saying it's impossible, but there aren't many people doing it, 64 million flies argument I know.

    • Thanks 1
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