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Posted

So, most of us take the pick up covers and or bridge covers off. Various reasons but please discuss!

My question however is….

Do you put the screws back in holes in the bass (so they don’t get lost and the holes don’t get filled with crap (technical term))?, or

Do you store them carefully with the removed items (and then find you’ve lost them when you go back to having the items on the bass)?

Answers on a postcard….

  • Like 1
Posted
8 minutes ago, Wombat said:

So, most of us take the pick up covers and or bridge covers off. Various reasons but please discuss!

My question however is….

Do you put the screws back in holes in the bass (so they don’t get lost and the holes don’t get filled with crap (technical term))?, or

Do you store them carefully with the removed items (and then find you’ve lost them when you go back to having the items on the bass)?

Answers on a postcard….

Personally, i take them out and use masking tape to affix them to the inside of the pickup cover, then put the covers back in the case/storage.

  • Like 6
Posted
41 minutes ago, skej21 said:

Personally, i take them out and use masking tape to affix them to the inside of the pickup cover, then put the covers back in the case/storage.

Same

Posted
53 minutes ago, Wombat said:

So, most of us take the pick up covers and or bridge covers off.

 

What are pickup covers and bridge covers?

  • Like 1
  • Haha 2
Posted
7 hours ago, tauzero said:

 

What are pickup covers and bridge covers?

Things from a bygone era 

Jack Hargreaves probably mentions them

in “out of town” at some point 

  • Haha 4
Posted

all bits go in the 'bits' drawer

I have all sorts in there

Vibrola from 67 SG jr

bridge saddles '62 P bass

trem spring covers from various guitars

half a '73 P bass pickup

many many pickguard screws

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

The pickup cover and bridge cover have never been attached to my American Original Jazz since new. Nor will they ever be. No unsightly holes in my bass, thank you very much.

 

One instrument I had already had the bridge cover attached by someone else (Grrr!), so I carefully replaced the screws after removing said Talent Inhibitor. I don't like unsightly holes if avoidable.

 

If I take an instrument's scratch guard off, I always lay the screws out in the exact pattern they came in, so the correct screw goes back into it's original hole.

 

Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to walk to the Post Office without walking on a single paving slab crack or join... 🤔

Edited by HeadlessBassist
  • Haha 3
Posted

I've done both, most recently I put them back in as I've lost them after affixing them with masking/sellotape in the past. 

Posted
10 hours ago, Geek99 said:

The former 

only crazy people would do otherwise 

That is just crazy talk 🤣 tape them to the covers and put them in the case or envelope in parts drawer. 

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Posted

If you put the screws in the holes, unless you leave them proud, the holes will be made bigger, so when you come to replace covers, the screws will have nothing to screw into. 🤷‍♂️

 

Put them in a bag with the covers. 

  • Like 3
Posted

Thank you for your thoughts. I did think about the weight saving for the boat anchor of a P bass in question. But then decided I was a bit of a muppet thinking it would make a difference.

Any thoughts on the type of tape to use? I don’t want to ruin the chrome, but I also don’t want the tape failing over time and losing the screws 🤷‍♀️.

Posted

And literally no one has said why we take them off!

Are we just sheep?

I saw someone recently rest their palm on the pup cover while they slapped. Seemed a neat way to avoid damping the strings accidentally?

Posted
Just now, Wombat said:

And literally no one has said why we take them off!

Are we just sheep?

I saw someone recently rest their palm on the pup cover while they slapped. Seemed a neat way to avoid damping the strings accidentally?

 

They're basically metallic talent inhibitors. We can't get to the sweet spot or move around the pickups for different sounds with them on.

 

Marcus Miller uses the neck pickup cover as a wrist rest, but I'm sure it still gets in the way.

 

I'm sure it was a great idea in the 1950s/60s to add them and have mute pads attached inside the bridge cover, but techniques have moved on in the ensuing 75 years - unless you're looking for the Laura Lee style consistency...

 

I'm sorry, I fell asleep there for a moment.

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
17 minutes ago, Wombat said:

...Any thoughts on the type of tape to use? I don’t want to ruin the chrome, but I also don’t want the tape failing over time and losing the screws 🤷‍♀️.

 

How about zip-lock bags (as used for food to put in the freezer...)..? Keeps everything together and dust-free. Re-usable, too, if ever you put the pieces back on the bass. B|

Edited by Dad3353
  • Thanks 1
Posted
16 minutes ago, Wombat said:

And literally no one has said why we take them off!

Are we just sheep?

I saw someone recently rest their palm on the pup cover while they slapped. Seemed a neat way to avoid damping the strings accidentally?

 

It's also a really neat way of stopping intentional damping.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1

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