Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Doctor J

Member
  • Posts

    5,288
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    5

Posts posted by Doctor J

  1. Unless Steve still owns it you’re free to do as you wish. If he wanted it to remain original he should never have sold it to you 😉

    There’s no point just owning a bass you’re not happy with or which isn’t the bass you really want. Either sell it or modify it which, let’s not forget, is how Steve ended up with that bass in the first place... and his one isn’t blue anymore either 😂

    If you’re really that troubled by it, pick up a cheap P body off ebay and route that. Then you can always put everything back to normal when some forum warrior is whining at you for not realising that, some day around thirty years into the future, this bass will have grown mojo and be most desirable in unplayed original form. 

    Make sure to post the end result 🙂

    • Like 7
    • Haha 1
  2. Every truss rod adjustment should end with a small tighten, to make sure any slack is taken up. In fact, on any adjustment of any threaded bolt or screw, always tighten up to your desired end point. Never slacken and leave it at that.

    • Like 1
  3. It’s a copy of the Warwick Just-a-nut version 1. I have one on my old Streamer, the real JAN1, that is. I dunno, I mean, when it comes to nuts you get it right once and then you leave it alone for the rest of the life of the instrument. I’d just buy some round files with the money and learn to file nut slots to taste. It’s far cheaper in the long run.

    • Like 2
  4. On 19/05/2020 at 09:24, stewblack said:

    Some access holes leave little space for a normal Allen key, with a right angle you come hard up against a string having barely turned the nut, this just looks better and more user friendly. 

    I would always, always loosen the strings before adjusting the truss rod. Having the nut work against the additional load the strings will apply on the rod is opening the door to trouble. Once they’re slack, it’s easy to move A and D aside and clear the space you need.

  5. Eddie Van Halen is an accomplished and tasteful guitarist, an innovator like Larry Graham. The problem is not the innovator nor the technique, but those who follow and think more=better... 

    Tap isn’t the problem, it’s tappers.

     

    And slap isn’t the problem either, it’s slappers (the other kind 😁)

    • Like 5
  6. I hate that it is automatically associated with funk. Slap is not funk. Funk is about space. Slap is, unfortunately, used by many as an opportunity to play more notes than they should and, therefore, is the opposite of real funk. Used sparingly, slap is fine. Abused as it is by seemingly 95% of those with twitchy thumbs, it is an aural abomination.

    • Like 13
  7. 3 hours ago, Johnteckel said:

    the one who did that bridge thing should be boiled.

    Tough but fair, I reckon 😂

    I was able to source a correct replacement part from Deviser. The order of the universe will be restored.

  8. This is the Ray-type. I can’t remember the model name... Anyway, it has been abused, note the bbot bridge atrocity, but it sounds and plays like a total beast and I am in the process of restoring it. I’m gonna fix it real good 😁
     

    5FBAE80A-8D8B-4CA3-8ECE-A6FB709BF83C.thumb.jpeg.965ee396da90e9f5d667eec2e43b54dc.jpeg

    • Like 2
  9. Another Bacchus fan here. Actually, Ead’s former Woodline P Classic above started life with me, sold very reluctantly. I have a 24 and a 04 Standard 5. I love them both. The 24 is scaled down body, light and really comfortable. Their pickups, particularly the ones with the Handmade logo, are excellent. I have a Stingray type I’m in the middle of restoring too, plus some nice 6 strings. I love them all. I got most of mine second hand from Japan, but bought the P and the LP new. Keep an eye on Ishibashi u-box, sometimes there are deals there which negate the shipping and import duty woe.

     

    74D46C7E-16F5-4EBF-B30B-D59158C20B10.jpeg

    6B83F6A9-84F7-45C7-968F-CEC912075B7F.jpeg

    B4A90BEF-C820-4898-AAE0-69B794F7FBA7.jpeg

    0C54FD82-0150-4597-9C36-D14F89AA27FF.jpeg

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...