Marc S Posted May 28 Posted May 28 (edited) Hi all. I took this bass in trade some time back, and I have a question about its electronics. I previously had one of these, and it had active electronics. My memory might be failing me - but I thought they were all active. However this one is passive. I can see that some soldering has taken place - but i can't tell whether this was once active or not? I'm not sure there's room for a battery? I removed the pickup covers a while back, and couldn't see evidence of tampering, or tell if these were replacements. Did Fender Japan make a passive P Lyte? Or has someone converted this one? I'm sure someone in here will know. Cheers all Edit: The output from the pickups / electronics is loud btw. Edited May 28 by Marc S Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted May 28 Posted May 28 That doesn't look like factory wiring and there's a suspiciously 'battery shaped' space in the contol cavity. 2 1 Quote
dudewheresmybass Posted May 28 Posted May 28 As mentioned above by @Stub Mandrel, I'm not aware of a passive version. Mine has the battery space as well, although I do know of a few that were 'fixed' - I've been tempted to cure mine many times. 1 Quote
casapete Posted June 7 Posted June 7 AFAIK all Precision Lytes have been active. 3 models , all MIJ. Precision Lyte - late 80’s to mid 90’s. Active 2 band eq ( bass and treble cut/boost) plus a pan and volume control. First editions had gold hardware, later ones had chrome. Both came in a number of colours. Precision Lyte Deluxe - mid 90’s. Humbucking bridge pickup , as above plus a mid cut/boost. Natural finish. Precision Lyte - recent ‘reissue’. Like the original but with 3 band active eq and a separate battery compartment ( unlike the original where the battery was included in the preamp cavity). Currently one of these is for sale at The Bass Gallery. I’ve had a fair number of Lytes, and my current sunburst one has been converted to passive after the original preamp failed. I actually prefer it passive now, but they’re all great basses IMO. 2 Quote
Marc S Posted June 7 Author Posted June 7 Thanks for your responses folks. I had thought they were all active - just thought I'd check. I had wondered whether the pickups would work well, without power, which I why I wondered whether they'd been swapped. TBH I still haven't removed them to check properly. They seem absolutely fine - so I guess if that bit ain't broke... Like you @casapete I think I prefer the bass as passive, which is generally my preference anyway. i need to get some fretwork done. They're all in good shape, with plenty of life left in them, but the ones at the heel end are a tad higher than the rest. I just need to get the action down a bit more, and this will be an amazing bass. These are so light for a 34" scale bass. The necks are also slim and Jazz-like, which I prefer, especially lately. 1 Quote
casapete Posted June 7 Posted June 7 6 hours ago, Marc S said: Thanks for your responses folks. I had thought they were all active - just thought I'd check. I had wondered whether the pickups would work well, without power, which I why I wondered whether they'd been swapped. TBH I still haven't removed them to check properly. They seem absolutely fine - so I guess if that bit ain't broke... Like you @casapete I think I prefer the bass as passive, which is generally my preference anyway. i need to get some fretwork done. They're all in good shape, with plenty of life left in them, but the ones at the heel end are a tad higher than the rest. I just need to get the action down a bit more, and this will be an amazing bass. These are so light for a 34" scale bass. The necks are also slim and Jazz-like, which I prefer, especially lately. As you say Marc, they have ‘standard’ pickups but an active preamp, so will work fine if the preamp is disconnected. I had a Fender ‘Noiseless’ bridge pickup fitted in mine, as some venues I used to play caused interference issues , and I left it in - still got the original though. I used mine for nearly 15 years touring theatres with a tribute band, and it proved to be great. The light weight meant I could do nightly sets of around two hours with no discomfort to my problematic shoulder. I set it with a lower action too, and learned not to dig in so much and let the amp do the work, which again worked fine for me. In all that time I never had to adjust the neck once, just using the same gauge sets of D’Addarios. The thin neck on it is sublime ( and this was for someone used to standard Precision necks!) It’s still my main electric bass, and I can’t ever see me parting with it. 2 Quote
SuperSeagull Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago I have the exact same bass also in Frost Red and had it converted to passive a few years ago when the pre amp failed. I much prefer it in a passive format, sounds more like a Fender. I went with vol per pickup and tone per pickup to use all 4 knobs. 2 Quote
Marc S Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago 9 hours ago, SuperSeagull said: I have the exact same bass also in Frost Red and had it converted to passive a few years ago when the pre amp failed. I much prefer it in a passive format, sounds more like a Fender. I went with vol per pickup and tone per pickup to use all 4 knobs. Thanks for that @SuperSeagull Mine still has the same functions to the controls - but I think I'd prefer the arrangement you have, with 2x vol and 2x tone. I definitely prefer a passive bass. Only once did a battery fail on me at a gig... but it's a lasting memory. It was quick enough to fix at the time (I usually carry a spare battery) but a pre-amp fail - ooh, that's a scary thought for a live gig, even though I'm sure it doesn't happen often. 2 Quote
Marc S Posted 9 hours ago Author Posted 9 hours ago On 08/06/2025 at 00:28, casapete said: ....I set it with a lower action too, and learned not to dig in so much and let the amp do the work, which again worked fine for me.... I really should try to do this more @casapete - but I think the old punk bassist in me just likes digging in too much! Lol 😀 1 Quote
casapete Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 11 hours ago, SuperSeagull said: I have the exact same bass also in Frost Red and had it converted to passive a few years ago when the pre amp failed. I much prefer it in a passive format, sounds more like a Fender. I went with vol per pickup and tone per pickup to use all 4 knobs. 2 hours ago, Marc S said: Thanks for that @SuperSeagull Mine still has the same functions to the controls - but I think I'd prefer the arrangement you have, with 2x vol and 2x tone. I definitely prefer a passive bass. Only once did a battery fail on me at a gig... but it's a lasting memory. It was quick enough to fix at the time (I usually carry a spare battery) but a pre-amp fail - ooh, that's a scary thought for a live gig, even though I'm sure it doesn't happen often. When mine was converted to passive, I opted for a master volume / master tone / pickup pan. Did this because I needed to mute quickly at time, and having two volumes made it a bit harder. 2 hours ago, Marc S said: I really should try to do this more @casapete - but I think the old punk bassist in me just likes digging in too much! Lol 😀 It’s been a bit of a learning curve, but as I’ve got older it’s been beneficial to my hands. 😄 Quote
SuperSeagull Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, casapete said: When mine was converted to passive, I opted for a master volume / master tone / pickup pan. Did this because I needed to mute quickly at time, and having two volumes made it a bit harder. It’s been a bit of a learning curve, but as I’ve got older it’s been beneficial to my hands. 😄 Understand and a good layout. Considered the same but I wanted (possibly irrationally!) to use all four knobs. 1 Quote
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