Chris Hales Posted Wednesday at 12:22 Posted Wednesday at 12:22 (edited) I've recently acquired a US made Stingray which I'm loving but I do find the neck a bit of a handful. I've noticed that the US made Sterling model has a narrower (38mm at the nut) neck but can anyone here comment on how thick the neck is? I find Fender's Slim C jazz neck to be to my liking and I'm wondering how the Sterling's compares? Cheers Chris Edited Wednesday at 14:39 by Chris Hales Spelling correction Quote
Twigman Posted Wednesday at 14:03 Posted Wednesday at 14:03 If I can find some verniers I shall measure mine when I get home. I have 2 Warmoth jazz necks ( both slim taper profile ) which are very similar I also have a Status jazz neck which feels slightly thicker than my EBMM Sterling Quote
obbm Posted Wednesday at 14:44 Posted Wednesday at 14:44 Just measured my 2003 MM Sterling and it's: Nut 0.87" 1st Fret 0.82" 12th Fret 0.92 15th Fret 0.95" Hope this helps 1 Quote
Chris Hales Posted Wednesday at 20:07 Author Posted Wednesday at 20:07 Thanks so much for the really helpful replies - that sounds very similar to what I'm used to with my Jazz. Oh dear... I feel another purchase coming on! Cheers Chris Quote
JohnDaBass Posted Wednesday at 20:18 Posted Wednesday at 20:18 The USA EB MM Sterling is very comfortable, fast neck. The maple neck maple fret board are probably the best. The pickup has a huge tone range. There's a couple for sale at Bass Gallery and a lovely maple neck ash body at Bass Bros. Quote
Twigman Posted Thursday at 08:35 Posted Thursday at 08:35 18 hours ago, Twigman said: If I can find some verniers I shall measure mine when I get home. Sorry I completely forgot. Quote
obbm Posted Thursday at 12:00 Posted Thursday at 12:00 As a comparison, my original Sterling SB14 is: Nut 0.84" 1stt Fret 0.83" 12th Fret 0.91" 15th Fret 0.92" 1 Quote
fretmeister Posted Thursday at 12:03 Posted Thursday at 12:03 You can special order a Stingray with the SLO neck option too - that is basically the Sterling neck on a ray. Not many used ones though, alas. 1 Quote
Chris Hales Posted Thursday at 20:28 Author Posted Thursday at 20:28 On 04/06/2025 at 21:18, JohnDaBass said: The USA EB MM Sterling is very comfortable, fast neck. The maple neck maple fret board are probably the best. The pickup has a huge tone range. There's a couple for sale at Bass Gallery and a lovely maple neck ash body at Bass Bros. I have to say my Stingray has a very comfiortable neck and it is very enjoyable to play - but I always end up wishing it was just that touch narrower. I'll check out Bass Gallery and Bass Bross - thanks for the pointer. 1 Quote
Chris Hales Posted Thursday at 20:31 Author Posted Thursday at 20:31 8 hours ago, fretmeister said: You can special order a Stingray with the SLO neck option too - that is basically the Sterling neck on a ray. Not many used ones though, alas. That's a uesful tip - I didn't know special options were available and I am more drawn to the Stingray body than I am the Sterling. Quote
Chris Hales Posted Thursday at 20:33 Author Posted Thursday at 20:33 (edited) 22 hours ago, obbm said: As a comparison, my original Sterling SB14 is: Nut 0.84" 1stt Fret 0.83" 12th Fret 0.91" 15th Fret 0.92" Thanks very much. There's only 0.055" difference between my "slim" and "clubby" Jazz necks but it's surprising how much difference that makes to the way they feel! Edited 19 hours ago by Chris Hales Multiple spelling corrections - I need typing lessons! Quote
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