Johannes Posted yesterday at 18:50 Posted yesterday at 18:50 To my experience mass of a bridge doesn’t matter much, actually a heavy slab of metal can make Your beloved vintage bass sound and feel strange. I think most important feature in bass bridge is its rigidity. Meaning that bridge saddles must hold their position in every axis, front-back for intonation, height for proper action. Sometimes there`s a problem with bad bridges when saddles are slightly sliding sideways. That’s where strings are loosing their vibrational energy. Quote
Dan Dare Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 13 hours ago, Johannes said: To my experience mass of a bridge doesn’t matter much, actually a heavy slab of metal can make Your beloved vintage bass sound and feel strange. I think most important feature in bass bridge is its rigidity. Meaning that bridge saddles must hold their position in every axis, front-back for intonation, height for proper action. Sometimes there`s a problem with bad bridges when saddles are slightly sliding sideways. That’s where strings are loosing their vibrational energy. Good points. I use a Babicz on my vintage J. It has the properties you describe and works very well. Being aluminium, it isn't really high mass, despite its appearance. Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago So you are saying that instead of mass-debating, we should just ensure our gear is as stiff as possible. 3 Quote
ezbass Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 20 minutes ago, Stub Mandrel said: So you are saying that instead of mass-debating, we should just ensure our gear is as stiff as possible. Come on, Mr Stubz, you’ve wandered off, without your medication again, back to the DoI with you. 2 Quote
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