Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 12:35 am
I don't think taking the logo off a Bronco Bass is a big deal. It's not like anybody will mistake it for anything but a Squier Bronco Bass, considering what else looks like one.
So can you explain why I had two basses, with identical electronics, a Squier Bronco Bass and a Fender Musicmaster Bass, which are the same basic design, I had the same Lace Sensor Red pickups in both of them, which are pickups that a lot of people think make all guitars sound identical, and actually I even changed the neck on the Musicmaster Bass to a Squier Bronco Bass neck because I didn't like the original neck. So why did those two basses sound completely different, where one sounded good and the other didn't? I went through a fortune's worth of strings, too.Rob DiStefano wrote:ah, yer one of those that must still believe the tone from an electric guitar is all about the wood and finish, eh?
here's a clue - electric guitar tone is all about the electronics. the rest of the guitar just holds those electronics and strings and frets together.
so, NO. what started out as a crappy toned "bass guitar" is now a true bass guitar, thanx essentially to better electronics ... and that, my friend, is NOT a bronco.
ymmv, as i'm sure it wiil, but you'd be incorrect.
ah, but to hear that '51 p-bass pup sing - that will make ya scratch yer head in wonder.honeyiscool wrote:I don't think taking the logo off a Bronco Bass is a big deal. It's not like anybody will mistake it for anything but a Squier Bronco Bass, considering what else looks like one.
did you move over ALL of the electronics from one bass to the other? i thought so.honeyiscool wrote:So can you explain why I had two basses, with identical electronics, a Squier Bronco Bass and a Fender Musicmaster Bass, which are the same basic design, I had the same Lace Sensor Red pickups in both of them, which are pickups that a lot of people think make all guitars sound identical, and actually I even changed the neck on the Musicmaster Bass to a Squier Bronco Bass neck because I didn't like the original neck. So why did those two basses sound completely different, where one sounded good and the other didn't? I went through a fortune's worth of strings, too.Rob DiStefano wrote:ah, yer one of those that must still believe the tone from an electric guitar is all about the wood and finish, eh?
here's a clue - electric guitar tone is all about the electronics. the rest of the guitar just holds those electronics and strings and frets together.
so, NO. what started out as a crappy toned "bass guitar" is now a true bass guitar, thanx essentially to better electronics ... and that, my friend, is NOT a bronco.
ymmv, as i'm sure it wiil, but you'd be incorrect.
I'd like to think that electronics do everything but I still think that especially with a bass, there's something about the actual sound of the instrument before it ever gets amplified. Some basses I've played seem to have a deep full sound and some seem to have a thin guitar-like sound and if you have that, I just don't think much can be done about it.
Oh, and I have another bass, an Aria medium scale bass, on which I've also fitted a Lace Red Sensor and that is not a particularly good sounding instrument either. A Bronco Bass with half rounds sound way more full than the Aria with flatwounds, and this is despite the same pickups.
Not at all.Rob DiStefano wrote:ah, yer one of those that must still believe the tone from an electric guitar is all about the wood and finish, eh?mkt3000 wrote:No. It is. Just with upgrades and a sanded headstock.Rob DiStefano wrote: no discussion needed - it's no longer a squier bronco.
Seriously, dude. What makes it a Bronco is the body first and pickguard shape second. A Stratocaster doesn't stop being a Stratocaster because you give it a bridge humbucker, or just two humbuckers, or just simply replace all the pickups with lipstick pickups. It's still a Stratocaster, with some changes to the electronics.mkt3000 wrote:Not at all.Rob DiStefano wrote:ah, yer one of those that must still believe the tone from an electric guitar is all about the wood and finish, eh?mkt3000 wrote: No. It is. Just with upgrades and a sanded headstock.
The rest of your post is moot.
And your bass, which I quite like, is a Bronco Bass with upgrades and a sanded headstock.
No, its still a VW Beetle, just a faster one. If you took the entire chassis of a 911, then put a Beetle body on top, then you might be right, but a modified Beetle is still a modified Beetle, just like a modified Squier Bronco is still a Squier Bronco, but with a better pickup. Nice work BTW.Rob DiStefano wrote:in '66 i bought a brandy new vw beetle.
in '69, just before trekking to woodstock, my buds and i installed a porsche engine and transmission, and beefed up the suspension.
it look like a vw bug, it said it was a vw bug, but it surely wasn't.
"stubborn" as in not calling a duck that sings like an eagle, an eagle.NickD wrote:I respectfully disagree, and you'll mever convince me otherwise.
What do you mean, stubborn
Do you remember the show?Rob DiStefano wrote:in '66 i bought a brandy new vw beetle.
in '69, just before trekking to woodstock, my buds and i installed a porsche engine and transmission, and beefed up the suspension.
it look like a vw bug, it said it was a vw bug, but it surely wasn't.
like man, if you attended woodstock, and remembered most of it, you really weren't there.LizardKing wrote:Do you remember the show?Rob DiStefano wrote:in '66 i bought a brandy new vw beetle.
in '69, just before trekking to woodstock, my buds and i installed a porsche engine and transmission, and beefed up the suspension.
it look like a vw bug, it said it was a vw bug, but it surely wasn't.
*sigh*Rob DiStefano wrote:like man, if you attended woodstock, and remembered most of it, you really weren't there.