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prowla

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Everything posted by prowla

  1. Yep, some Rics had the adjustment from the body end. But the pickguard was in two parts. I don’t know what the headstock looked like under the TRC. It was only the first iteration of the 4003..
  2. Genuine Ric strap buttons are one piece including a threaded shaft; strap buttons with a screw through don’t fit a Ric.
  3. Presumably the truss rods adjust from the other end of the neck (like the first 4003 models with the split pickguard)?
  4. Got a picture of the ends of the straplock buttons?
  5. Thanks for thinking of me! My sights are set on an Ovation, but they are rather expensive. 50 squids for this seems like an awfully good buy, though the crack is disturbing...
  6. Hmmm - dunno if that's a real one, but it has some real parts. WTF with the bridge!!!???!!!
  7. 1) Cetera - Spector NS2 & Legend 4X, Dingwall NG2, Epiphone Vintage Pro Thunderbird, Yamaha BB3000, GK800RB head, Genz Benz Neox212 cab, Tech-21 Dug DP3X preamp/pedal 2) Ezbass - Maruszczyk Elwood L 4 string fretted (J pickups), Maruszczyk Elwood L 4 string fretless (MM pickup), Rickenbacker 4003s, Rob Allen MB2 fretless, Phil Jones Flightcase + PB300 3) Happy Jack - AliKat DB #004, Mike Lull 54P, all I need to play a doubling gig (that evening) on those two instruments 4) BlueJay - Eminence Upright (left-handed), loads of camera equipment 5) obbm - TBA 6) Nancy Johnson (Paul) - The Big One, rack (GED/poweramp), possibly the dUg DP3x. A bass. 7) MacDaddy - Shuker bass(es), Snapdragon Folding bass, Flattley Bass Poison Ivy. 8. prowla (Paul) - Maybe a Ric or two and fakers, maybe a couple of Statii, maybe J- & P-basses. Probably a Markbass amp & cab and a pedalboard with some FX.
  8. Cheers! It cost me £333 in 1982 - I bought it with the money my grandad left me when he passed away. The SD went on when I was having some feedback issues and the Hipshot replaced a Badass I had on it.
  9. Mine is identifiable and I'm sat in my office with my Winchester .357 close to hand... (It has been customised a bit, but I'm on the lookout for a gap-tooth bridge to revert it to stock.)
  10. I'm a fan of Rics and fakers! I've got a '72 Ric in age-darkened Fireglo, checkered binding, wavy Grovers, crushed pearl. 😍
  11. Yep. Lots of other brands too (really all from the same couple of factories) and variations (bolt-on/thru neck, 1/2 truss rods, treble pickup, generic/replica machines, single/dual jacks, pickup location, etc.). The 70s ones will take standard Ric parts as-is; I'm fiddling around with a Hondo II (MIK) and putting Ric bits on it pending getting a real Ric carcass.
  12. I do wonder how many have plugged its output into another pedal, though... 🙂
  13. Yes - I might get him to make me a bass when my ship comes in.
  14. Expect to pay in the £400-500 range, or £100 up for parts/project depending upon what's there.
  15. 70s Rics & fakers: I've never seen 70s faker which is better made than a real Ric; that's based on my having owned 6 fakers and seen several more over the years. Primitive truss-rods: One of my Rics had a neck repair, because a previous owner adjusted it incorrectly, but that is their fault for doing it wrong; why should things be done the Fender way? There is an advantage in the old truss-rod system, namely that they can be easily replaced. I like the old truss-rod system. Exploding machines: I've got a 72 Ric with Grovers which seems OK (but I've got a spare set just in case!); Ric resolved the issue by replacing the machines they use and the current ones are fine. Tail-lift: Tail-lift, that's a fair criticism; the stock tailpiece is an achilles heel. But the part can be replaced like-for-like with a current one or 3rd party. many people will replace a bridge on a Strat without complaining that a 30 year-old part hasn't lasted a lifetime. It is possible to fit a fix (as I know you know!). Neck-lift: I don't know how many instruments neck-lift has affected over the years, but is often caused by not following the recommendations on string gauge/tension. Rickenbacker shifted the neck pickup to help mitigate against the risk. It is, however (and admittedly), an inevitable consequence of the whole premise of the instrument: placing a pickup there and having the body thin means that the wood at that point will be thin. But on the flipside, nobody complains that their acoustic guitar is fragile because the body's wood is thin and they have to treat it carefully, so why should a bass be any different? I've got a 70s Japanese faker with neck-lift. I suppose the basis of the issue is inherent in a thru-neck design; with a Fender, you just put in a shim or adjust the micro-tilt and job's a good 'un! Finish: I've got one 60s and two 70s Rics and the finish is fine; matured to a nice vintage feel and certainly no better or worse than any other vintage guitar. In contrast, my experience of faker finishes is that they are more brittle than real Rics and they are more prone to chipping. It's funny that owners of other brands try and emulate the "road-worn" look of their heroes' guitars and refinishing a vintage instrument is frowned upon. MIJ quality materials: I've had a couple of fakers whose binding has detached. Their tailpieces tend to be made of thinner metal than the stock Ric ones and so are equally (or more) prone to tail-lift. The materials may not be so well matched and may flex differently with age, for example forming a channel along the skunk stripe. Chickenbackers: Yep - the current ones are pale imitations, but there are folks who use the "better than a real one" line when talking about them and I don't know who they are trying to kid. Overall, Rics are undoubtably quirky instruments which are made by a company who sticks to its own path and has not become part of the homogenised Fender-a-like blandness of many others; I kindof like that. I also think that the vintage fakers are fun instruments, but the "better than a real one" really doesn't stand up to scrutiny.
  16. Just one correction to the above - neither the 70s Japanese fakers nor the current Chickenbackers are of similar, let alone better quality than an actual Rickenbacker. I challenge anybody to demonstrate otherwise.
  17. I thought that Ampeg did a rack-mount preamp and here's one that sold on ebay recently. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Ampeg-SVP-Pro-Preamp-/113112449571?hash=item1a56070223%3Ag%3Akk8AAOSwD99ayMYj&nma=true&si=NHDiROD4oAAb%2FJ7CV2z5DMB%2BEgw%3D&orig_cvip=true&nordt=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557 Also, in searching for links to it, I came across this clone... http://www.frontiernet.net/~jff/SonOfSVPCL/DIYSVTBassPreamplifier.html
  18. The headphone output is equivalent to a preamp, so won't drive a speaker. EH do a power-amp in a pedal https://www.ehx.com/products/44-magnum which I've seen being used at a guitar show.
  19. And a nice jetglo one it is! Mine was the mapleglo and Harry bought the Shaftesbury faker off me.
  20. Probably better made than a real one, but probably cost a bit.
  21. Beware also that there appear to be fake Tokai fakers about (ie. cheap copies pretending to be Tokai copies!) - there's a 6-string guitar being discussed elsewhere at the moment.
  22. Just as a foil to the "can't spot a faker" mantra, here's a Gibbo which is being called out as a fake. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392090193584?ul_noapp=true
  23. I can confirm the veracity of my statement!
  24. He'll be OK - here's my 4 real Rics! (Also, I don't have any of the current illegal fakers.)
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