FlyStraight99 Posted Tuesday at 22:44 Posted Tuesday at 22:44 Hey all, I’ve rehearsed a few times with the Squier Affinity PJ bass and it’s a thing of beauty, the PJ pickups, the maple neck and black body, as well as the proper precision shape and neck size (I bought a sonic precision previously which had a jazz neck - I don’t mind a thin neck but wider works better for my sausage-like digits) only caveat is the pickups are very… mild? Very thin and not as overpowering although I am influenced by my Harley Benton pbass which has fitted SPB-1 pick ups among other little bits. I plan on having the below done for performance & aesthetic reasons. Would you recommend anything else be done that’ll improve the bass for gigging? SPB3 pickups & pots upgrade matte black S/plate gotoh multitonal bridge schaller lightweight tuning heads string retainer for A D & G (plenty of break angle on E string) Cheers! I don’t get on here enough it’s awesome! 3 Quote
itu Posted Tuesday at 23:29 Posted Tuesday at 23:29 Start with pickup adjustment or simply turn more gain from the amp. Make a trial with different strings to find the set you like the most with this bass. tapewound - flatwound - groundwound - nickel RW - SS RW ...and of course try different gauges. Quote
Rodders Posted yesterday at 08:27 Posted yesterday at 08:27 As @itu says start with the cheapest options first i.e. checking set up, amp settings, strings etc and see if that has any improvement on the sound. Quote
Mrbigstuff Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago If you’re going to this level of mods, I’d get the frets levelled by a top luthier to make it play like butter. That and the nut will make the biggest difference. Quote
Lozz196 Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago The changes suggested will all improve the bass in terms of quality, but as above a good fret level & change of nut will make it be able to be set up to play at its best. That coupled with the pickup change will get you a bass that plays great and sounds it too. One thing to consider though, quite often Squier put 500k pots in the electrics, resulting in a quite toppy sound, sometimes just swapping those to 250k can bring a real change to the existing pickups. Might be worth a try. Quote
Bassman68 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I’m pretty sure that the Affinity series come with Ceramic pick-ups, my white PJ certainly does… They’re a bit of an acquired taste, being quite bright, but get the height right & they can sing. I found the maple neck quite bulky but I swapped the neck out for a 70’sCV which is somewhere between a Jazz & a P-bass width, but lovely & slim in depth. As others have suggested, get a good set-up done & see how you get on before shelling out on too many upgrades? Otherwise you might be better off saving for a better quality instrument in the long run… Quote
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