Minininjarob Posted Sunday at 16:59 Author Posted Sunday at 16:59 This is a really bad idea isn’t it?? 1 Quote
Minininjarob Posted Sunday at 18:42 Author Posted Sunday at 18:42 1 hour ago, Lozz196 said: Incredibly so! Thanks for the reality check. 😂 2 Quote
ian61 Posted Monday at 08:34 Posted Monday at 08:34 Yep, plenty of SQ love around here. My VM P bass with those 'Duncan Designed' PU's is probably best P bass Ive ever had, and Ive had a few over the yrs. Quote
JJMotown Posted Monday at 10:46 Posted Monday at 10:46 (edited) 2 hours ago, ian61 said: Yep, plenty of SQ love around here. My VM P bass with those 'Duncan Designed' PU's is probably best P bass Ive ever had, and Ive had a few over the yrs. Which, the white or amber? I've a sunburst sonic P with laural or whatever the faux rosewood is, instead of standard maple, with gold anodised vintera pickguard. Looks great, sounds really good with flats. Really like the narrow neck, nice and fast. Edited Monday at 10:48 by JJMotown Quote
ian61 Posted yesterday at 15:06 Posted yesterday at 15:06 It was actually a shop damaged blue VM P/J which I got for cheap. Plugged the bridge cavity kept the P PU and repainted....Its now a standard VM P bass albeit with a minor alteration. Great neck, under 8IIbs and nicely resonant. 1 Quote
JJMotown Posted yesterday at 16:51 Posted yesterday at 16:51 1 hour ago, ian61 said: It was actually a shop damaged blue VM P/J which I got for cheap. Plugged the bridge cavity kept the P PU and repainted....Its now a standard VM P bass albeit with a minor alteration. Great neck, under 8IIbs and nicely resonant. Nice, I had the same PJ bass a little while ago, albeit, I don't recall it having Duncan Designed pickups. Quote
Minininjarob Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago Ok so update. I have given up on the black theme for now as it was getting a bit expensive. Main reason was that I couldn’t find any tuners that would use the original screw holes apart from some really cheap ones which might have been worse quality than what’s on the bass already. It’s gotta work well and look good. So for the moment I’ve got a brushed alloy pick guard which is a big improvement on the white original, and a Fender hi mass bridge and new strings (current ones are not nice) . I’m also upgrading the electronics as the originals are a bit scratchy to be honest. Keeping the PU’s as I think they sound good. So a big change nonetheless but not as big as planned. Spending around £120 on it might seem a little crazy but I’ve got a P with a jazz neck with for £290 which a pretty good I think. Just need everything to arrive and I’ll get pics to show the upgrades. 2 Quote
Obrienp Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Fender high mass bridge: good choice and pretty good value as high mass bridges go. 👍 2 1 Quote
Minininjarob Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 4 hours ago, Obrienp said: Fender high mass bridge: good choice and pretty good value as high mass bridges go. 👍 Thanks. I really can’t stand the BBOT even though I know it works ok. Just looks so naff. 1 Quote
SlapbassSteve Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago These new Sonic Series models are absolutely fantastic- I've a Bronco and it's a far better bass than it has any right to be for sub-£150! Fretwork was incredible on it, hardware all worked nicely. Pickup, strings, and scratchplate were the weak links but definitely not dealbreakers when everything else was so good. I normally fretdress new acquisitions and this one didn't really need it at all. We've come a long way in the last 30 years for that to be the case! Totally agree about the pickguard though! For full disclosure I should add I make them for a living so probably care about this far more than most folks; but nothing bothers me more than seeing Squiers with a 1-ply white guard with 45 degree edges. Main reason? It'd be no more expensive (cheaper if anything) for Squier to make them with 90 degree edges, which would just look better automatically, maybe because they'd look more like the original HIPS ones Fender used in the 1950s... instead though it just makes the whole thing look super cheap. Especially on those 90's Affinity models where they all turned that grim uneven shade of cream from UV. My guess is the edge bevels are harder for some players to catch their hands on... but using a 3ply material that'd look better would make the next models up harder to sell so maybe it's also a way of making the more expensive ones feel like more of an upgrade. On my Bronco the actual quality of the cut was really quite good, it was a well-made and fitting guard, no unevenness around the edges- but just looked nasty because of the material/bevel choice. Quote
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