sbrag Posted Tuesday at 21:06 Posted Tuesday at 21:06 I've just managed to bugger my yamaha bb110d that has been my go to bass for over 30 years. I've somehow snapped off the active/passive switch and am now getting no sound. Does anyone know if this is an easy enought fix or can recommend someone good with electrics/preamps in the Bristol area. Thanks Quote
PaulThePlug Posted Tuesday at 21:14 Posted Tuesday at 21:14 Simple-ish... Got a pic of the inside the control cavity? 2 Position Switch, Couple of Quid... 1 Quote
sbrag Posted Tuesday at 21:25 Author Posted Tuesday at 21:25 Thanks Paul. That's what I was hoping. I've just put it away but will take a pick in the morning. Just had a look. Lots of wires as PJ with 3 band active EQ with passive volume and tone with an active/passive switch and 3 way pickup selector. Quote
MichaelDean Posted yesterday at 07:40 Posted yesterday at 07:40 (edited) Steve at Hawker Repairs has done some really good work for me before, including a really complicated repair on my Dingwall after the strap button screw sheared off insite the top horn. Give him a call and see what he says. https://www.facebook.com/hawkerrepairs/ But yes, if you're ok with soldering, it shouldn't be a big job. Take the switch out, and put a picture up here and someone will be able advise what you need to buy. Edited yesterday at 07:41 by MichaelDean Quote
sbrag Posted yesterday at 08:01 Author Posted yesterday at 08:01 20 minutes ago, MichaelDean said: Steve at Hawker Repairs has done some really good work for me before, including a really complicated repair on my Dingwall after the strap button screw sheared off insite the top horn. Give him a call and see what he says. https://www.facebook.com/hawkerrepairs/ But yes, if you're ok with soldering, it shouldn't be a big job. Take the switch out, and put a picture up here and someone will be able advise what you need to buy. Thanks. Was thinking of Steve Hawker. Will drop him a line. Quote
sbrag Posted yesterday at 08:13 Author Posted yesterday at 08:13 Pics of the Preamp and a close up of the underside of the switch Quote
neepheid Posted yesterday at 08:32 Posted yesterday at 08:32 (edited) Looks like it's mounted on some kind of small circuit board. This will either make it extra easy, or extra difficult. Hopefully on the easy side - you just need to get the right switch, remove the old one from the board, solder in the new one, job's a good 'un. No fiddly wires to wire directly to the switch. In times like these, I make a circuit diagram before I start (just the area I'm working on, not the whole thing!) - noting wire colours and tracing where they're connected to, lest I break one off during the removal process. Edited yesterday at 08:34 by neepheid Quote
sbrag Posted yesterday at 15:11 Author Posted yesterday at 15:11 Thanks all for your help. I've realised it's more than want to take on myself so hopefully Steve Hawker will be able to sort it next week. 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.