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Happy Jack

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by Happy Jack

  1. Poptastic!
  2. Most cabs are either 8 Ohms or 4 Ohms. The lower the resistance, the more power will be extracted from your amplifier, so if you plug your rig through an 8-Ohm cab, and then plug it through an otherwise-identical 4-Ohm cab, the 4-Ohm can will sound much louder. NOT twice as loud, but a pretty big step up. Life gets exciting when you start combining cabs in pairs. For reasons that you can look up on t'Internet, if you pair two 8-Ohm cabs then their combined resistance drops to 4 Ohms, and if you pair two 4-Ohm cabs then their combined resistance drops to about 2.7 Ohms. There are plenty of amps that can handle resistance as low as 2 Ohms, but there are plenty more that can't. The easiest way to tell the difference is to look for the tell-tale white smoke coming out of the back of the amp. This is not a design feature. As a general rule it's best not to get hung up on wattage figures. They are horribly misleading, easily misunderstood, frequently misrepresented, and tell you surprisingly little about how loud a cab will go. Trust your ears. Go and see half a dozen bands playing the sort of gigs that you expect to play, check out what the bassist is using and how he/she sounds, go and have a chat between sets. Find a sound you like and see whether you can buy something to match. You'll sell it within the year as you learn more, but that's the price of spending time on Basschat.
  3. Good thinking ... Marmite would work, wouldn't it?
  4. And with the pickups reversed ...
  5. Never heard of it?
  6. That was Rick expressing his relief that he could stop singing that high. We've already dropped it from F# to E to make it possible for him to sing it, and he has a pretty good range. The Tokai Thunderbird that I was playing there was kept detuned by a tone and reserved for just this song at each gig.
  7. Oh well, if at first you don't succeed ... cheat.
  8. @Silvia Bluejay will fix ...
  9. No worries Michael, just use a blowtorch on them and dunk them in cold water. They'll soon come round to your way of thinking. "Feed 'im to the pigs, 'arold."
  10. It's about 10lbs ... way less than some basses I've owned, but also way more than the Mike Lulls I've been playing this last five years. That said, I've now bought a Rickenbacker 4003s5 which weighs just over 9lbs, so my back is clearly in better shape than it was a while back.
  11. If it's rusty, won't it already be a pale brown colour?
  12. My my, hey hey ...
  13. Bang on, Blue. I worked for a living for 44 straight years, earned enough to take early retirement, and took it with both hands. The great majority of my tiny annual income now comes from playing pub gigs (well below the threshhold for income tax) so that makes me a professional musician. And boy am I going for it. Not entirely sure what 'it' is but when I find out I'll come back here and tell you.
  14. Let's start with urine. Allegedly.
  15. Yup, play the first two bars, kick in the looper, go and get a beer, maybe watch the band.
  16. Sorted: https://www.gak.co.uk/en/mooer-audio-micro-looper-loop-pedal/91492?gclid=CjwKCAiAy9jyBRA6EiwAeclQhKpvrle_NBFLr-Rm53n_Wv9GELMI_aDVdHEYa7udQOJr0g8SaSyfRBoC1A4QAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
  17. Call that a plank? I reckon it's a fence post.
  18. Only on Basschat ...
  19. I have a genuine '57 and a genuine '65, neither of which have this problem. Relicing? Pah! Genuine? Your 'avin' a giraffe.
  20. I don't know why, and it's not something I asked John Hall about (), but I noticed a steady drop-off in the Rick Gestapo's activities starting from the moment that John Hall retired. I'm really not sure they bother much these days. What d'ye think, @Bassassin?
  21. And anyway, it's cool, innit?
  22. That is mental as anything and it looks great ... congratulations!
  23. No No No! Simplify the process. Buy a shortish piece of plank of appropriate size (I tend to use a 48" length of 5" x 1" or similar) and take your time positioning screwholes - preferably countersunk to get rid of the heads - in the plank and matching holes in the walls over the wooden studs. Attach your guitar hangers to the plank, working safely and comfortably on a workbench, and finally attach the completed rig to the wall. This last bit is MUCH easier if you have a helpmate. Be aware that the supplied screws that come with most guitar hangers IME are pathetic slot-heads made of cheese. Buy some decent cross-head/Philips/Posidrive screws to replace them, and be sure to use the right type of screwdriver/bit rather than "this is close enough, it'll do".
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