Geek99 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 15 minutes ago, chris_b said: The new price of my Fender Precision in 1969 was £120. That's nearly £1700 today. Within 3 years I'd replaced the nut (broken) and frets (worn down). I'm not sure prices are that bad these days. My guess is you get a better made bass, at all price points, than I did. Agree, but the continuing argument is whether you can also get a better-made, better QC fender-a-like for less. Eg Sire Quote
tegs07 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago (edited) 28 minutes ago, Geek99 said: Agree, but the continuing argument is whether you can also get a better-made, better QC fender-a-like for less. Eg Sire I don’t think that there is any doubt that Indonesian or Chinese or Korean manufacturers can make instruments, cars or fairly soon aeroplanes or spacecraft as well as the Americans. Hence the current tariffs and other short term noise. Edit: There will obviously be some flexibility to this point in terms of budget. At the very bottom end corners will be cut wherever something is made and over time things will balance out. Wages, property prices etc will increase in the Far East as these countries continue to become more affluent. Edited 17 hours ago by tegs07 2 Quote
chris_b Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 36 minutes ago, Geek99 said: Agree, but the continuing argument is whether you can also get a better-made, better QC fender-a-like for less. Eg Sire With advent of CNC machines quality of cheap basses has gone through the roof. The QC that Asian manufacturers achieve is down to the contract and how much the brand owner cares about quality. Quote
chris_b Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago The only thing cheap basses don't always do well is pickups. Cheap pickups will make any bass sound less than perfect. Quote
Mrbigstuff Posted 16 hours ago Author Posted 16 hours ago 23 minutes ago, chris_b said: The only thing cheap basses don't always do well is pickups. Cheap pickups will make any bass sound less than perfect. That’s a good point. Aside from Sire, I always found that the pickups on cheaper basses lacked depth (bass frequencies) in their pickups. The originator of Sire was an electrician/ engineer, much like the founder of Markbass. My MIM P bass had American standard pups but I improved it a lot by swapping them for Lindy Fralin 3 Quote
prowla Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago On 09/08/2022 at 08:13, Burns-bass said: Import duties, raw material costs, wage increases, transport costs, lower production volumes… Anyone involved in selling stuff can tell you how costs have increased across the board. Moaning about how much a Fender costs is the same as my dad complaining that a Mars bar cost 9p in 1965. So what? Given Fender has laid off 300 people they’re hardly making a mint from building basses and guitars. It would've been 6d in 1965. Quote
chris_b Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 6 hours ago, prowla said: It would've been 6d in 1965. They were the size of house bricks in 1965. Well. . . . nearly! Quote
Geek99 Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) 10 hours ago, Mrbigstuff said: That’s a good point. Aside from Sire, I always found that the pickups on cheaper basses lacked depth (bass frequencies) in their pickups. The originator of Sire was an electrician/ engineer, much like the founder of Markbass. My MIM P bass had American standard pups but I improved it a lot by swapping them for Lindy Fralin Agree but totally cannot fault my v7-5 sire. Just don’t need anything else even a keyboard player said “that looks awesome” upon first sight. The guitarists didn’t say anything as it was snack time and someone had hidden their duplo Edited 6 hours ago by Geek99 Quote
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