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Skinnyman
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I have one of them Rickentractor basses and, much as i love it, I've always been frustrated by the lack of anywhere to anchor a thumb while playing the E string (I use the floating thumb technique but do like a good solid place to rest the thumb while I'm on the E).

On my Fender Jazz, there's a nice chunky pickup to rest on, ditto my Sandberg. But the accepted place to rest a thumb on a Ric is the top of the pickguard which, for me, is too far away.

I saw the Zero Mod which is available from the US but it's £20-odd quid plus postage and it just runs along the top of the PG so doesn't, in my opinion, solve the problem.

So I got some modelling putty and made my own as a prototype - once I'd got a shape and position that worked i passed it on to a mate who has a few 3D printers and the appropriate CAD software and received back this.

I'm well chuffed with the result - OK, the shape could follow the PG slightly more closely and I'm a bit annoyed that I managed to scratch it when i was drilling it but i reckon it's pretty good for a first attempt, especially as I'm a cack-handed plonker who generally breaks anything I touch.

Prototype

1220737756_IMG_20190112_1657462.thumb.jpg.9842b487f8023cdb67d34eb46f8e077c.jpg

And the printed article:

1006923626_IMG_20190112_1639562.thumb.jpg.0bc52be1c672baace6461ba94da2d61f.jpg884350014_IMG_20190112_1639472.thumb.jpg.4b5dcc9257a6820300b3eb68feaf455e.jpg1498198148_IMG_20190112_1640032.thumb.jpg.943e280226c3e6ac6fe2d5cb32b2d279.jpg

 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Very pretty for a RickenTractor™  ;) 

Some proper product design type stuff going on there!

I had a similar problem with the Gretsch - the ideal place to anchor my thumb was on the acrylic neck pickup surround, but it was too thin at 3mm.

I 'borrowed'  :secret: the jet black Coreon sample from work, cut it down, filed it to shape & fitted over the pickup surround using the same screws & holes.

You don't see it, but it gives me a great anchor position.

Not as clever as your design though :)

 

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Edited by Teebs
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2 hours ago, Skinnyman said:

Pictures of the Mark II version - very pleased with this one. All I have to do now is finish soldering the ground connections and screening the electrics as I managed to introduce a loverly hum when i took the pickguard off....

 

Great job there.  Methinks you should stick a post on the f/sale board for these...

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11 minutes ago, ead said:

Great job there.  Methinks you should stick a post on the f/sale board for these...

I need to see if my buddy is prepared to run off a batch and how much they'd cost. So far he's done these two at mates rates but his printers run pretty much 24x7 so I'd have to order and pay for a few and it would only be fair to pay him the proper rate.

I'm also not sure how big the market is for them - but it might be worth getting a dozen or so and seeing....

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You could put a post on here (and maybe the Ric forum?), explain there's a lead time and see?  Worth doing a design registration if you're serious about it though.  Any idea what it's likely to cost?

I sold my Ric 'cause I couldn't get on with exactly this issue and in those day additive manufacturing hadn't been invented.  Actually not strictly true it was was called rapid prototyping then and still very costly for hobbyists.

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That's an idea. I'll get the costs and then, as you say, stick a post on here, TB and the Rich forum.

Might be worth looking into design registration first as you suggest.

The actual materials cost will be negligible - it's amending the designs for the different variations of Ric and the opportunity cost of printing (while he's printing my rests which might punt for £15 or £20, he's not printing the commercial components that he charges thousands for.

Still, worth investigating...

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