Lozz196 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago I see them from £1500 to £2000, the regular standard ones. Quote
Bolo Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago https://www.basschat.co.uk/forum/121-wotzit-werth/ Quote
Mrbigstuff Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago Like most basses, a lot more than I sold mine for…. 2 3 Quote
Misdee Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago 3 hours ago, Supernaut said: The USA Stingrays that is. Cheers. If you mean for a used Stingray then the best answer is "very variable", but if your patient and look round a while you can get a bargain. The resale on Stingrays can be pretty low compared to the price of a new one because they've been making them a long time, they're very popular, and there were always plenty available in the shops. Consequently, there's loads of them in circulation of various vintages. If you find someone selling one they bought used, you might even pick one up for under a grand. Probably not on Basschat at that price, though. Quote
nilebodgers Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago Lol - I’ve always fancied a Stingray, but they have always been just that bit too expensive for my tastes. Quote
Russ Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago EBMM are coming out with a new line of Stingrays that sit above the Sterling ones but below the regular US-made range a bit later this year, not a million miles away from what they did with the SUB basses back in the day, but without the Hammerite finishes. They're supposed to be somewhat cheaper than the regular US-built range. Quote
fretmeister Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 11 hours ago, Russ said: EBMM are coming out with a new line of Stingrays that sit above the Sterling ones but below the regular US-made range a bit later this year, not a million miles away from what they did with the SUB basses back in the day, but without the Hammerite finishes. They're supposed to be somewhat cheaper than the regular US-built range. I am suspicious that the US Specials will go up, and the mids will get all the really heavy wood that nobody wants, especially as the Specials are now close to the same weight as the old versions. So much for the new "lightweight redesign" they started with. Quote
TommyK Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago FWIW: I paid 1500 for a 2013 Classic 2eq last week. Good but not perfect condition Actually the best sounding Stingray i've ever had IMO Quote
warwickhunt Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago It doesn't seem so long ago that £800 was the going rate for a pukka full fat USA Stingray and you could pick one up on BC most weeks... I said 'seems'! I'd be surprised if there are many around as cheap as £1200 and I'd expect a regular/non-special to be closer to £1500. 1 Quote
hiram.k.hackenbacker Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago It very much depends on what vintage you’re looking for @Supernaut. To some degree the spec is also a factor. H, HS, HH, Piezo, SLO, Ltd Ed etc Quote
acidbass Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I'd say higher for the Stingray Specials, as they seemed to correct the 40 year old 'weak G' problem. I believe those instruments from 2018 onwards to be far superior. Quote
AinsleyWalker Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 14 hours ago, Mrbigstuff said: Like most basses, a lot more than I sold mine for…. I remember listing my USA Ray on here for about £500 a decade ago. Not a single bit of interest... Thank goodness... Would have seriously regretted letting it go, especially for pennies. I paid £750 for it with hardcase etc in 2011, great price for a USA ray. Edited 1 hour ago by AinsleyWalker 1 Quote
lowregisterhead Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 4 minutes ago, acidbass said: I'd say higher for the Stingray Specials, as they seemed to correct the 40 year old 'weak G' problem. I believe those instruments from 2018 onwards to be far superior. The Special range is definitely more consistent, and the build quality is excellent, but to me they've somehow engineered out the soul of the instrument, and they don't sound anything like the original pre-EB Stingrays. But then what does?? Quote
SteveXFR Posted 50 minutes ago Posted 50 minutes ago 12 hours ago, Russ said: EBMM are coming out with a new line of Stingrays that sit above the Sterling ones but below the regular US-made range a bit later this year, not a million miles away from what they did with the SUB basses back in the day, but without the Hammerite finishes. They're supposed to be somewhat cheaper than the regular US-built range. Given that a Sterling Ray 34 is £900 now, a budget EBMM Stingray is likely to be £1200+ so still not exactly cheap. Ive had a couple Sterling Ray 34's and 35's and they are really good. Used EBMM Stingrays on Reverb vary from £1265 - £4069. It looks like a budget of £1800 gets you a decent choice. Quote
peteb Posted 27 minutes ago Posted 27 minutes ago 1 hour ago, warwickhunt said: It doesn't seem so long ago that £800 was the going rate for a pukka full fat USA Stingray and you could pick one up on BC most weeks... I said 'seems'! I'd be surprised if there are many around as cheap as £1200 and I'd expect a regular/non-special to be closer to £1500. Very much this. I've got a 91 Stingray (no case) that I don't use much and I've been advised by a couple of guys in the trade that I could easily get £1,500-1,600 for it (although I am in no rush to cash in on it). Ten years or so ago, I was buying and selling US Stingrays for £700-800, which then creeped up to about £1k. The price has definitely gone up since then. Quote
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