Johannes Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 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 5 hours ago Posted 5 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 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago So you are saying that instead of mass-debating, we should just ensure our gear is as stiff as possible. 2 Quote
ezbass Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 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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