Marvin Posted Saturday at 07:42 Posted Saturday at 07:42 I'm looking to buy another Jazz bass and the 2 candidates (the only candidates) are first version of the Fender Vintera 60s Jazz or the Squier CV 60s Jazz. I'd just be interested in opinions on either, especially what the necks are like. Thanks Quote
Geek99 Posted Saturday at 07:47 Posted Saturday at 07:47 The cv is far cheaper - having tried both I wouldn’t say there’s an awful lot in it 1 1 Quote
Marvin Posted Saturday at 08:55 Author Posted Saturday at 08:55 1 hour ago, Geek99 said: The cv is far cheaper - having tried both I wouldn’t say there’s an awful lot in it Would it be fair to say the Vintera is quite a bit of money to have a Fender decal on the headstock? Quote
Geek99 Posted Saturday at 10:02 Posted Saturday at 10:02 1 hour ago, Marvin said: Would it be fair to say the Vintera is quite a bit of money to have a Fender decal on the headstock? Yes, in my humble opinion Quote
HeadlessBassist Posted Sunday at 08:32 Posted Sunday at 08:32 (edited) Having played both, I'd say that they both feel of similar quality. My more recent experience is with the Squier 40th Anniversary Jazz and a nice example Firemist Gold Vintera Jazz that was for sale in a branch of PMT. The biggest difference you're going to find is in the pickups and the wood choices. The Squier pickups were the usual Duncan Designed ones which are, in isolation, pretty good. But the Vintera actually sounds like an alder 60's Jazz bass, much like my American Original with its Pure Vintage 64 pickups. You also get the tall and thin vintage reverse tuners on the Vintera. If you can find a nice one, a used Vintera 1 would be a great buy. The neck profile of the Squier is a pretty standard modern C-shape, but the Vintera is a little narrower and thicker (fingers to thumb), again, like a 60s Jazz. Edited Sunday at 08:34 by HeadlessBassist 1 1 Quote
jd56hawk Posted yesterday at 08:42 Posted yesterday at 08:42 (edited) Are you talking about a used Squier CV Jazz bass? If so, go for it. The Crafted In China CVs were among the best Squiers made. Nothing intrinsically wrong with the Vintera, but it's nothing special. Edited yesterday at 09:18 by jd56hawk 1 Quote
Supernaut Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 40th Anniversary if you can find one. I had a Chinese Squier and it's far superior to that. IMHO. 1 Quote
Geek99 Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago Wise words from @Supernaut and @jd56hawk if I wasn’t a five string convert, I’d be all over a squier CV or probably several Quote
King Tut Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Personally I’d go for the CV (I have a Chinese one) due to the flatter fretboard profile. Quote
Marvin Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago I'm probably going to go for the Squier. One thing I have noticed with the Vintera is the truss rod is at the heel which, although period correct, is irritating. Quote
HeadlessBassist Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 8 minutes ago, Marvin said: I'm probably going to go for the Squier. One thing I have noticed with the Vintera is the truss rod is at the heel which, although period correct, is irritating. That's definitely a valid concern, Marvin. I've never been able to change the one on my American Original, although it's thankfully never needed it in the 6 years I've had it, and I definitely don't want to be taking the neck off. Nooo. It's interesting how all Fender's modern necks (except the Vintera/Vintage models) have been through production streamlining now, and all now have truss rod adjustment at the nut & a skunk stripe on the back. Edited 1 hour ago by HeadlessBassist Quote
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