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Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2010 6:15 am
by tomin8r
I picked up a Bronco bass for my needs, the stock pup is crap/decent, so I put a hot rail and thicker strings on it, and for the money, its a pretty damn good bass.
Also, due to the price, you can mod it out pretty well and still have a good bass for cheap.
Cheers
Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2010 7:01 am
by serfx
the stock pup is a squier strat bridge pick up.
i pulled mine out and replaced it with a seymour duncan hot rails
but it sounded wonky
so i'm waiting for an SD basslines single coil
LANK
Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2010 5:19 pm
by Viljami
Didn't somebody here replace the pup to a red Lace Sensor? That's what I'd do, anyway ('coz I'm not original).
Posted: Sat Feb 27, 2010 12:42 pm
by Mr.Ripley
serfx wrote:
so i'm waiting for an SD basslines single coil
I was actually planning on doing the same with my musicmaster bass but when I realized it didn't fit through the pickguard I just kinda left the project to the side. I'm still debating whether to get a new pickguard or try and file the plastic on top to fit through the original :/
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 11:50 am
by MStone
I've been regularly checking for basses's, and I've come across another one:
Goomtree
Does anyone know about the serial numbers on Jazz Basses's? Apparently, the neck plate reads 230590, and he claims it is vintage..
Is that a reasonable price? The only shops I really know about are all on Denmark St - and the prices there seem to be quite a bit higher than I imagine they should. But I don't know. What should one be paying for a Jazz Bass in the UK?
S'il vous plait.
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 12:08 pm
by Bacchus
Hmmm, he doesn't really seem to know what he has there, so I don't think he should be describing it as vintage.
£450 seems an awful lot, but maybe it isn't.
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 12:14 pm
by MStone
BacchusPaul wrote:£450 seems an awful lot, but maybe it isn't.
See, that's what I was thinking...
Anybody in the UK care to share what they paid for their Jazz Bass? Or Miscellaneous Bass?
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 12:49 pm
by kim
it's abviously not this :
http://www.rockpalace.com/en/product/Fe ... k-Rosewood
control knobs, shade of the headstock etc
this ?
ask for more detailed pics and stuff maybe to find out wtf it really is.
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 12:50 pm
by kim
on the last pic the stuff on the headstock is not the same.
this is just a gut feeling but i think it's a fender japan jazz bass.
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 1:28 pm
by MStone
He does mention it has a Japanese neck pickup, so perhaps the whole lot is from Japan.
It also has one of those "finger rest"? thingys on the pickguard... (absent in the wiki picture).
Google tells me Japanese Fenders are of good quality - anybody disagree?
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 1:30 pm
by Bacchus
Japanese Fenders are excellent. It seems odd that the only modification he mentions is adding a Japanese pickup.
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 3:36 pm
by kim
yeah i'm sort of wondering it looks too 'new' to be an actual vintage jazz, 70's with the 'f' neckplate but fender japan guitars and that 'f' neckplate seems to make sense, also the darkened finish on the neck and headstock scream out fender japan, the 'new' american 'vintage' jazzes with pup covers have 2 chrome knobs and the rosewood 'stripe' in the neck, no idea about vintage but it's also another thing that makes me think it's a fender japan jazz maybe with just pup covers added because i don't see pup covers in the fender japan catalogue...
Posted: Thu Mar 11, 2010 5:22 pm
by Ankhanu
BacchusPaul wrote:Japanese Fenders are excellent. It seems odd that the only modification he mentions is adding a Japanese pickup.
Especially since the pickups are generally what are taken out of a Japanese bass and replaced with better ones
It does seem a little expensive, but also looks like a pretty nice bass. I'm with the others on the vintage thing... but, people are referring to instruments as young as the early 90s as "vintage" these days...