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Posts posted by Prostheta
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If you can pry it out of my cold dead metal hands man :-D
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Suggestion - subscriber-only part of the board perhaps? That way the transfer would pay for itself as opposed to bringing hosting into negative equity.
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+1
If the break is clean and you have the splinters then clamping it back up for repair and perhaps a refinish isn't out of the question. Did the contact point cause much wood crushing and fracturing, or was it a pretty clean break?
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http://www.basscentre.co.uk although there will be other outlets. I presume it's through the larger Warwick dealerships.
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I could set you an FTP account on my server but I'm not sure how long I'd be able to maintain if for you as I'm about to be hosting DetonalState.com when it's redesigned....straight out Photobucket perhaps?
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I've got most of the hardware already sorted. I bought a Warwick aftermarket bridge and tailpiece set, although I still need to sort out the tuners. The bridge is a two-piece with a base set into the body of the instrument, and the top piece with the saddles on attaches via two allen bolts. The tailpiece is a slight V which also recesses into the body by about 1/3" or so.
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Trust me - that's a trem. Look at the back...it has a cover for the springs! Plus it's more Wilkinson-esque, yes. My Ibanez is much nicer than that one too....I think the model is an S1640FM Prestige although they're all pretty similar really.
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UPDATE!!
I built up the router table and used a 1"/45° chamfer bit set to chamfer 5mm up from the black pinstripe line to rout around the entire body up the the recesses near the neck, including into the side recesses. From there I used a combination of chisels, planes and spokeshaves to work the side up to the contour I drew up on the top of the body. From thereonin I just sanded with 80 grit and brought it up to 120 for the photos.
The carve is nowhere near finished as I still have to do the bottom half of the body (only a rough carve right now) and the back needs to drop down for the bridge and tailpiece. I'm almost 98% certain I'll dye the top red on black and use Rustin's plastic coating.
Tomorrow I'll probably plane down the bookmatched veneer I'm making for the headstock. Either that or I'll destroy it in the process. We'll see.
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Contoured Explorer!!!
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Mike - i'm considering finishing the bass i'm building with Rustin's Plastic Coating (2 part cold cure lacquer) although my concerns lie purely with the pore structure of padauk. Will it sink into the pores a lot or should I grainfill? Popular opinion says that it fills and seals nicely so I suspect two coats would be enough. Perhaps one coat over a grainfill?
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Try it if you have a good design which is structurally sound and theoretically practical. Seriously. Before this thread turns into a:
- "oh, that would be like xxxx guitar but with different xxxx"
Ideas can easily be dampened down by aligning them with ideas that are already in place. Follow the established guidelines of instrument making and you'll make something which is undeniably of your own making and brainchild!!
Although, It'll be freaking heavy - yes.
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I've got a lot to practice on routing for inlays. Much harder and dedicated work than people make out. Looks and sounds simple in practice, but hell - *one* mistake can undo every little thing you've aimed for. I think TG put a lot of work into the fretboard and the results prove themselves. I've seen bigger borders on commercial instruments!
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What is the compatibility and finishing like for Rustin's Plastic Coating on woods with open pores like Paduak?
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Axe.
Topical joke.
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I've not test oiled any padauk yet, especially as I'm in two minds on how to finish the bass. Oiling will be done if I leave it all natural, but I'm tempted to leave a thin faux binding strip around the outside and dye the top a deep rich red on black.
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The longer and less supported a neck is, the greater the chance of it having deadspots. You can also minimise the risk of dead spots by building in stiffness to the neck, either by laminating it from several stiff woods, or by using carbon fibre bars alongsie the trussrod.
Hahaha. As always Setch - how much more concise and to the point can you get?! :-D
Damn, you killed the whole debating thing man.
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I just clamp a trued up block of wood next to the spindle on my oscillating sander. It's a bitch when it drags the wood in when you don't start on the right side though :-D At least, I blame the sander, not my choice of feed direction. Ahem.
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Excellent build! Great to hear that your problem has been sorted :-D
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Having the pickups set too close to the strings will disturb the ability of the strings to vibrate naturally, as will high powered magnets. In many ways, active low impedance pickups with lower magnetism like EMG's will give a "truer" sound.
Excellent summation! I find that EMGs are wonderful in their transparency and "unintrusiveness". On the other hand, they are also a little characterless in comparison with their organic quirky brothers :-D
On a slightly off-topic sideline, I think the current marketing blurb talk for a "truer" sound is currently "hi-fi" making out that a semblance of realism, or lack of noise/distortion is inherent in active pickups. Misleading by analogy. In reality it's the build of passive pickups (strong magnets) that cause the problem as you explained! I wouldn't use "hi-fi" as an analogy of this difference. My analogy against hi-fi in a reversed vein would be using a flint as a needle on a record player.
Okay, I'll say it before somebody else does: "what the hell are you on about, Carl?!"
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CooL! Is this basically the same cosmetically as an LP toggle? I wouldn't mind one of these myself...!
I do have another one if you really want it. I'm not sure how much shipping would be to UK, but that's about all it would cost you.
For wiring, how about,
Three volumes, a master tone, and the three way switch just selects one pickup at a time.
The only wiring I've done is swapping out a few pickups, so I dont want to get myself into anything I would get too overwhelmed with and never finish. Is there anywhere I could get a diagram for this wiring?
Once again thank you all for your replies.
I was more thinking as a retail source for when I find a use for one, now I know they exist but thanks for the offer!
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Hahahaha :-D
Well, I'm sorely tempted to finish it with Rustin's Plastic Coating although the size of the pores on the padauk are quite scary.
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Oddly enough, we're dropping Domination into our December gigs :-D
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Hahaha...I'm from a different school though really. I'm all for technicality in moderation but plain solidity and having a tight rhythm section is much more essential! My favourite example of a bassist on these lines has to be Nikki Sixx of course. Simple, thundering and just *there* on the dot, man.
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Indeed I could, but I prefer to spend time crushing instead of noodling :-D I'm not a harp player like some ERBs!!
I'm really looking forward to completing this project. I'm still in two minds whether or not to carve the edges down within a few mm of the pinstripe, and leave faux binding and go for a dyed top or whether to finish 100% natural and Tru-oil everything. I'm highly tempted to dye the maple black or perhaps a deep black stripe under red.
Any feedback on how Tru-oil will work over dyed figures?
How Far To Sand Back The Black Coats On Figured Maple....
in Inlays and Finishing Chat
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Your advice is much appreciated Mikhail. I can't believe I forget that I started this thread!
Anyway - I much prefer the PRS finish in relation to what I'm aiming for. I've shifted my goalposts slightly and decided to Rustin Plastic Coating the bass (instead of oil) with faux binding at the edges. I'm not stealing your design idea's soul though! :-D
How did you mask yours off to prevent dye bleeding? I'm considering using painted-on shellac, or perhaps masking the body using painters tape and spraying sanding sealer. The sandback colour is going to be black with a bit of red added for bringing up the final "redness" with a slightly lighter sanding accent around the carves to bring out the shape of the instrument.