Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Grimalkin

RMember
  • Posts

    1,070
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Grimalkin

  1. 6 minutes ago, gt4ever said:


    the neck follows the contour and neck is straight. All strings sit with even gaps.  Saddles all set correct and have not moved.  It’s weird that the day after the gig the A string plays fine with clearance but at the gig I couldn’t get a note from the first 5 frets at all.  I assumed that temps wouldn’t affect a carbon neck.  It was an indoor gig and bass is always kept indoors at ambient temps.

     

    The neck shouldn't be dead straight really. When you pluck a string it has a wider vibration pattern in the middle than at the ends, that's why a slight bow of about a millimetre or more depending, is put into the neck as relief, to allow for the wider vibration at the centre of the string. What leads me to think of temp difference is that you found the bass ok the next day. So what changed...

  2. On 18/11/2022 at 09:19, Barking Spiders said:

    As well as being one of the worst bands ever, to me KISS stand for everything that's rank about crass, unfettered consumerism on this planet. Gene Simmons is a colossal t0$$3r. I can objectively see one or two merits in most bands I can't stand but not KISS.

     

    One for the kids wasn't it.

     

    As the old quote goes:

     

    "If you were a twelve year old boy and you weren't obsessed with KISS, there was probably something wrong with you. If you are over the age of twenty years old and still obsessed with KISS, there is probably something wrong with you."

    • Haha 1
  3. String gauge makes quite a difference. I use a lighter .40 on the G set compared to the factory fitted which are usually .45. The softer tension from the lighter set means I have to move the saddles forward to intonate it.

     

    It would be unusual IME to receive a completely duff set of strings, usually I've found it's just one string in the set that is suspect.

  4. 3 hours ago, Chienmortbb said:

    Is this not a reason why Les Paul necks are so weak? The angle of the headstock means that there is no real grain strength there.

     

     

    That, and the fact that they are made of mahogany, which splinters up a treat.

     

    I've witnessed a Gibson EBO bass, Gibson Les Paul Junior, a white Gibson SG with a trem and a Gibson 335 dot, all having head-stock breaks.

     

    The Les Paul Junior was in case that fell on its side, that's all it took.

  5. Take two strings off and spread the rest out.

     

    18mm is the least I would want, I've found it depends on your physicality, I have fairly long fingers. Anything less than 18mm feels too cramped. I've owned and sold three Stingray5's over the years because of the tighter string spacing, it's not going to work for me.

×
×
  • Create New...