Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

How heavy is too heavy?


JimBobTTD
 Share

Recommended Posts

I was looking for a backup bass, and thought about making one from parts. I found a great Japanese BC Rich copy which needed everything but body, neck and tuners. Well, it was great until, in discussions about postage, I found out it weighs 12lbs (5.5kg). I don't know how much two P pickups, a bridge and the electronics weigh, but they won't make the thing lighter!

I can't help but think that 12lbs+ is crushingly heavy...or am I mistaken?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I aim for 9lb being about as heavy as I'd like, though I own a bass that is closer to 10lb. I'd consider anything over 10lb to be heavy

I've owned a bass that weighed over 12lb and though the tone was fantastic I'd not want to repeat the experience and 'yes' I will sacrifice a little bit of tone to save lugging an extra 3lb around on my shoulder at every gig.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have found that some of the heavy basses i have owned (5 string basses),at around 11lbs did have the best sound,but i cant handle that weight now for long playing/practising times,so i wont buy anything over 10lbs if possible.
For me 9.5lbs is around the best weight for a 5string bass.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I personally dont care at all about weight, as long as the bass has a perfect balance. If the balance is perfect then the weight gets distributed more evenly and my spine is positioned on a very straight way that allows me to stand a heavy bass without problems.

So far the only bass I have played that had a perfect balance was a Hohner Jack Bass Custom, headless. I had it for years and it was a dream to play with (save some cheap electronics and pickups, those 'EMG select' pickups are pure crap), unfortunately the intensive gigging and road life screwed its electronics, frets and trussrod badly, and I had to let it go. Now Im pestering Ian 'Chopthebass' to craft one his Sirius basses for me, since every headed bass I have had/tried tended to pull the neck down, even if only slightly, but enough to force me trying to push it up, slowing my left hand, moving my shoulders out of balance and bending my spine, causing pain at the end of the night.

If you would like to experience the perfect balance of a headless bass, I suggest to contact Ian 'Chopthebass'. He is a member of these forums and will surely be kind enough to let you have a ride on his Sirius bass. He is also accepting orders and his prices are so cheap Im still shocked! you can also check the looks of his basses on his avatar pic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had a 14.5lb Wal 5 string. Great sound, but way too heavy. Got another 10lb Wal, less bottom than the previous bass and still too heavy! I'm now talking to Jon Shuker about a light weight ash 5 string which will hpefully weigh about 8/9lbs.
Weight definately seems to add to the bottom end, but also can make some basses a bit muddy sounding?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

waynepunkdude - I can't see anything special about the strap in the picture. Or do you mean he now uses one of those "twin" strap thingies for the guitar he has on him in the picture?

On the topic of the original bass which prompted this thread: I've found out that it weighs 12lb [b]including [/b]packaging. But like most people I know (except Swedes), I have no real understanding of weights. How much would the packaging weigh? I have some spare guitar bodies and they are not heavy. But pop them on the scales and they weigh 1.75kg each! If 1kg = 2.2lb, then I could see the packaging weighing that much or even more, which means this bass could weigh as little as 8lb. I've asked the seller a couple of times for the weight of the bass itself, but I keep getting "it weighs 12lbs packed up". I think that she thinks I'm questioning her postage rate. Either that or she is being intentionally stupid.

I'm babbling a bit here, and I apologise. I asked how heavy you folks think is too heavy because I don't understand this stuff! Hand me a bass, and I couldn't tell you its weight.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

TBH I'd expect the packaging to clock in at 2-3lb (a bag and a bit of sugar :) ), unless the package includes some kind of case or gigbag in which case the bass is as you say going to clock in as quite a light-weight. I have to confess I didn't read your OP thoroughly and I was talking about basses that weighed up to the 12lb 'excluding' any packaging. I'd say that 12lb fully packaged equals a bass that will be absolutely fine for weight when played.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My Spalted Maple Alembic Series II weighed in at 15lbs !

It was like playing with an iron gurder strapped to you.... that is the only reason why I don't own the instrument now !!

By the end of the first set i'd usually be in pain !!!

10lb is my "ceiling" for a gigging bass

Edited by Marcus
Link to comment
Share on other sites

warwickhunt - I thought that it was 12lb excluding too. The seller's first response was unclear: "This is a 12lb weight in package without case". But now I know better! Thanks too for your calculations. I'm starting to think that it will be fine. The only worry is that pickups, electronics, 9v battery and bridge will start to add up to a heavy bass...not to mention the fact that the seller is seemingly reluctant to reveal the true weight of the bass.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Fraktal' post='252243' date='Jul 31 2008, 06:50 PM']Oh, BTW, this seems to be a nice solution to heavy basses, sold at thomann.de, has anyone ever tried it?[/quote]
I bought one of those for my Dolphin, which is the heaviest bass I own. In short it was a waste of time and I went back to a wide Comfort Strapp.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='JimBobTTD' post='252541' date='Aug 1 2008, 10:19 AM']warwickhunt - I thought that it was 12lb excluding too. The seller's first response was unclear: "This is a 12lb weight in package without case". But now I know better! Thanks too for your calculations. I'm starting to think that it will be fine. The only worry is that pickups, electronics, 9v battery and bridge will start to add up to a heavy bass...not to mention the fact that the seller is seemingly reluctant to reveal the true weight of the bass.[/quote]

The extra bits all add weight but the bridge is the greatest mass. As a point of note... are you sure that you can get all the bits easily? I'm not an expert on BCR but I'd have thought the bridge would have been quite specific to them as they are quite idiosyncratic instruments! There is someone on BC who is a bit of a BCR fan, it may be worth doing a quick search... DONE - it be 'Shockwave' :huh: Why not have a word with him about BCR weights and the availability of parts.

<edit>

You might want to disregard the above as I've just noted that it is a BCR 'copy' so the relevance of any info will be negated :)

Edited by warwickhunt
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the concern, mate! I've been tinkering with guitars for a while, so getting a bridge on it is no problem. I'll choose something chunky, throw in two EMG P pickups...a couple of 9v batteries and have myself a [size=4]METAL MONSTER[/size]!!! (Assuming that the seller gets back to me about the weight and it is no more than 9lb or so.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...