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Norris

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Everything posted by Norris

  1. Nice one. If you've chewed a little bit extra here and there you can always file/sand it down if you're not too precious about the exact body shape. You will have to be a lot more careful with your neck pocket though - that needs to be a good fit
  2. If you are thinking of refinishing it yourself have a look at Micro Mesh. They come in a pack of 9 wet sanding pads going up to 12000 grit! A lot easier to use than you'd think. The key to a good finish is preparation though. An extra hour to get it right at each stage will save you 3 hours at the next stage
  3. Nice one! I think I'd try to follow through with the original design/intentions as much as possible
  4. Do you use a string lubricant such as Finger Ease or Fastfret? That could help if you're doing a lot of slides
  5. When we rehearse it is usually at my house, guitarist brings his little practice amp, drummer plays my cheapo electric kit through a bass practice amp, I play through a powered monitor wedge and vocals are unamplified. We get the arrangements, endings and harmonies sorted, then make some noise at the gig. It doesn't have to be loud. In fact sitting listening to each other is the best way to get it tight imho
  6. If you're using a top bearing template follower bit you might need to put some packing under the template. Pickups are usually a fairly shallow route, so a short bit is handy. However it you use a guide bush on your router you can use a standard straight bit. I find it's easier to get a neat result, albeit with the added complications of calculating and drawing the offset. I have a coin with a hole of the correct size drilled through the middle, which leaves the offset distance. Then I can use it a bit like a spirograph wheel to draw the cut line including the offset
  7. Personally, to do a pickup route I'd use 6mm mdf for the template and a router with a guide bush. You can practice on scrap wood and fine tune sand the template until it's spot on. Perspex/acrylic is usually better cut by machine - water jet or laser. For that you would need it on the computer. Then you'd probably use the acrylic as a master template to cut "disposable" ones out of mdf to use for the actual routing. If you are going to make your own just go steady, take your time and be prepared for a lot of sanding. I wouldn't bother polishing the edges - your router bearing would probably do that as it goes along Do practice on scrap though, and be prepared to bin it and start again if it's not right the first time. Careful preparation is the key to a neat job
  8. That's a beautiful looking bass. Fabulous!
  9. My most pronounced callus is on my pinkie. I think that answers the question
  10. Don't try and get under the decal with the Stanley knife blade as it will dig in. You'll want it at about 90 degrees. Have a look on YouTube for people using cabinet scrapers - it's the same technique
  11. The bridge (saddles) to 12th fret distance needs to be the same as the 12th fret to nut distance for the frets to be in the correct places. That would then involve moving the bridge on your Jag - which would then leave holes and need the bridge ground wire moving. Then your pickups are not in the same relative position... etc. Buy another bass
  12. Any guitar building and modding is fine by me Post pictures though. It should be an interesting mix
  13. I keep my own teaspoon at work! As for removing the TRC, well I had my reasons (see avatar). The original is safely tucked away though
  14. If someone is particularly persistent about us playing song X by artist Y, we'll announce a "new" song by artist Y and then play which ever song we were going to do anyway. Most of the time we'll have a go at requests. We encourage them. As for requesting mid-song we'll usually ignore them until the song is done
  15. Actually you could probably make your own plaque by printing it on the computer and shoving it through a laminator. See my avatar - I made my own TRC to replace the original (and genuine)
  16. You could always leave the original one there and just fit another for your thumb. Or get a little personalised name plaque made to screw into the holes?
  17. [quote name='Muzz' timestamp='1496245904' post='3309909'] We don't rehearse much in the function band (at all over the last few years), but that's just what works for us - we all know each other and every song inside out before we play it for the first time. Since we dropped down to a trio, though, there's been some reworking of the set and new songs, so we've actually had a couple of rehearsals recently. [/quote] Blimey - I could have written that same statement, except for the word function and that we've always been a trio
  18. I have a tuner app on my Android phone. I also recently bought a fairly cheap D'Addario clip on tuner which seems pretty good
  19. I'd be tempted to check the ground connections on the back of the pots, in fact that all ground points have a good connection to the jack sleeve and to each other.
  20. Seriously though, you could try getting him to clap the rhythm as he sings solo
  21. It sounds like he's simply not taking the job seriously. A singist is a musician, the same as every other member of the band. If you're not going to strive to be better, you never will be. Raw talent, to whatever degree, will only get you so far. As the saying goes, take a s**t or get off the pan!
  22. I've had mine a year or two now and it's been very reliable after the initial in-warranty hiccup. It's been gigged regularly and sounds great in pretty much any room. I've never struggled for a bit of heft
  23. Plug cutters are not the easiest things to use. I'd try everything to avoid removing wood first. Heat and pliers on the screw stub first. Try to cut a slot and use a flat bladed screwdriver. Failing that carefully saw a flat surface then use a centrepunch and drill the screw out
  24. An Irish pub in town. Had to set up at 7pm and then hang around to play 11-2. Even though we are in no way even close to an Irish band we were TOLD to play a couple of traditional folk songs. The clincher though was the threatening atmosphere - from the landlady and bar staff! The crowd were fine
  25. That looks great
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