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The Bass Doc

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Posts posted by The Bass Doc

  1. Well you could certainly compensate by your technique but my answer would be to let the neck in slightly i.e. lengthen the neck pocket so that you achieve nearer 34.25 spacing nut to bridge.

    This is taken as the approximate measurement to the D and A string as the G is more like 34" and the E sring closer to 34.5 when the 'slope' is taken into account. You may need a tech to do this but it shouldn't cost much.

    The holes in the neck may need plugging and re-drilling to suit.

  2. The expression 'Leo got it right' is bandied about quite a lot.

    I understand the view but being one of the very few people to have spent some time with him I can say that he wouldn't neccessarily claim that.

    I met him at CLF Research in 1979 when he was producing guitars for Musicman and he was constantly trying to improve and develop his instruments. I would say the Stingray may well have been the first truly active bass to be a world-wide success and of course he went on to design some fine instruments under the G&L banner.

    I can't imagine that any present day luthier of the more boutique/unique styled basses would denegrate Leo Fender's pioneering work since I guess they would accept they had to design [i]from [/i]something that went before.

    For his part LF only claimed that he was lucky in producing the first production-run bass that 'caught on' i.e. that if any other company had beaten him to it [i]that [/i]may well have been how the masses would expect a bass guitar to be.

    So, dear friends, we should respect the original innovater and at the same time be grateful that further innovations have come along to enable all tastes to be satisfied.

    The fact that the Precision bass (along with it's derivitives) continues to be probably the most popular in the world to this day as far as numbers are concerned is a credit to the man but were he still alive he would no doubt be trying to improve on it.

    Viva la difference! (as the Spanish would say, Rodney).

  3. [quote name='skankdelvar' timestamp='1362928541' post='2006288']
    as a debater .............. he was either a cack-handed fraud ...........
    [/quote]

    Not sure you're right on this occasion skank.

    I for one considered him to be a *master debater*.


    *[size=2]pronunciation is key[/size]

  4. [quote name='JwK94' timestamp='1362499390' post='2000227']
    Its a Squier VM Jazz and the previous owner has put some "Reflex" pickups in it (never heard of them) and they are really quiet, so i'll be changing the pickups no matter what.
    [/quote]

    There were two types of Reflex pickups - Reds and Blues. The Blues were a bit milder but the Reds, when working properly, were definitely not quiet. Check which ones you've got in there and also check that the battery they need to power up the preamp circuit is healthy before you decide to change.

  5. From past experience the 1 second delay in 'cutting in' is normal for these pickups. The principal they work on is similar to EMGs except the preamp is external (the black box you have) instead of being built into the body of the pickups themselves (the EMG system). As such you do not have an active circuit in the usual way - the pickups being passive and the active boost applied when you plug in.

    Afraid the cutting out you are experiencing is not something I am familiar with - others may chime in with a possible cause?

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