kwmlondon Posted Monday at 17:44 Author Posted Monday at 17:44 12 minutes ago, ezbass said: He’s playing up at the 10th fret! Burn the witch! 🤣 I know. Right up the dusty end... Because it's a 5er I often anchor myself from the C on fret 8 of the 4th string up to the C on the 10th fret of the 2nd string, especially as I'm learning to sight read at the moment and it's a key position to work at. 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted Monday at 19:55 Posted Monday at 19:55 7 hours ago, LowB-ing said: The Dead Spot Eliminator is a tunable resonator that stores energy at a particular frequency and feeds it back into the neck. This is pure audiophile talking meaning absolutely nothing and wrapped in pseudo science. If it was really doing this, it would mean an even more pronounced dead spot by frequency cancelling. I've been in the audiophile sphere during so many years, and it's the kind of things you read very often, alongside the extraordinary snake oil. I'm still an audiophile, but not an idiophile. 1 1 2 Quote
kwmlondon Posted Monday at 21:01 Author Posted Monday at 21:01 1 hour ago, Hellzero said: This is pure audiophile talking meaning absolutely nothing and wrapped in pseudo science. If it was really doing this, it would mean an even more pronounced dead spot by frequency cancelling. I've been in the audiophile sphere during so many years, and it's the kind of things you read very often, alongside the extraordinary snake oil. I'm still an audiophile, but not an idiophile. Well, everything has a resonant frequency, the aim I guess is to push it to a beat where it doesn't interfere in a noticeable way with the frequencies you want to hear. Quote
Sean Posted yesterday at 08:50 Posted yesterday at 08:50 I wonder how many readers of this thread have picked up their basses and started looking for dead spots. I'm not going to bother. I'm not aware of any and would be frustrated if I found one. Good luck with getting it sorted and although I've not had any dealings with Dingwall, I only hear positives about its customer service. 3 Quote
itu Posted yesterday at 09:27 Posted yesterday at 09:27 13 hours ago, Hellzero said: This is pure audiophile talking meaning absolutely nothing and wrapped in pseudo science. Exactly. While the theory about dead spots is true (nearly every particle and shape resonates) the snake oil thing is usually too easy to add to the texts. Bigger is bigger, and more is more. That product page had lots of text, even though the basic theory is about resonance, a stick attached from one end. If you change any parametres of it (length, weight...) the system changes. One way to tune the system is to change the tuners. One by one, or all at once. 1 Quote
kwmlondon Posted yesterday at 09:36 Author Posted yesterday at 09:36 (edited) 46 minutes ago, Sean said: I wonder how many readers of this thread have picked up their basses and started looking for dead spots. I'm not going to bother. I'm not aware of any and would be frustrated if I found one. Good luck with getting it sorted and although I've not had any dealings with Dingwall, I only hear positives about its customer service. As I've said before, I'd had a bass for years and only noticed a dead spot recently. It was very, very slight - just one note that didn't sustain as long as the others, but as someone pointed out earlier the only way to 100% guarantee you don't get them is to go headless and maybe even use synthetic materials. Edited yesterday at 09:37 by kwmlondon Quote
police squad Posted yesterday at 09:43 Posted yesterday at 09:43 51 minutes ago, Sean said: I wonder how many readers of this thread have picked up their basses and started looking for dead spots. I'm not going to bother. I'm not aware of any and would be frustrated if I found one. Good luck with getting it sorted and although I've not had any dealings with Dingwall, I only hear positives about its customer service. all my basses have dead spots. It really doesn't bother me as you don't hear it in the mix down at the Dog and Duck My Dingwall actually needs its truss rod adjusting atm................rude! 1 Quote
Sean Posted yesterday at 09:55 Posted yesterday at 09:55 14 minutes ago, kwmlondon said: the only way to 100% guarantee you don't get them is to go headless and maybe even use synthetic materials. Hmmm, this is today's new thing for me. I've had headless basses, 7 Hohners, a Status Streamliner, a Status "somethingelse" graphite/wood (sorry, can't remember) and I didn't know about the dead spot thing. "You're always on that Basschat forum..." "Yes, I learn stuff. Most days." 3 Quote
TheLowDown Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) I had a dead spot on one of my Sires, 7th fret on the G string, that seemed to have just.....disappeared. I'm pretty sure I put flats on it long after that, but other than that I can't account for any change. Edited 1 hour ago by TheLowDown 1 Quote
kwmlondon Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago On 10/02/2026 at 09:43, police squad said: all my basses have dead spots. It really doesn't bother me as you don't hear it in the mix down at the Dog and Duck My Dingwall actually needs its truss rod adjusting atm................rude! I know. It's just that I do anchor myself on that part of the fretboard and now I've heard that the C doesn't sustain it niggles me! I think I can mititgate it a bit though so will report on next steps. Quote
kwmlondon Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 30 minutes ago, TheLowDown said: I had a dead spot on one of my Sires, 7th fret on the G string, that seemed to have just.....disappeared. I'm pretty sure I put flats on it long after that, but other than that I can't account for any change. I mean, it may end up being less of an issue after a setup and a change of strings - won't go away but could be less noticable. These Dragonskins+ seem to be very high tension. I could try putting the old set on to see - I keep the previous set and shove in my gig bag in case of a breakage. Handy to have a precut set to hand. Quote
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