MrChedda
Active member
I can edit the "usual questions" sticky - good idea. Although it will probably be along the lines of "Should I consider an aftermarket pickup" "NO."
Lol, sounds good. Thanks man.
I can edit the "usual questions" sticky - good idea. Although it will probably be along the lines of "Should I consider an aftermarket pickup" "NO."
I personally think you should do whatever you want to your own stuff in order to make it do what you want it to do.
how do you "upgrade" a bongo? you dont, you spend a good long while playing it and attempting to rise to its level.
Oh, and at one place I worked in my old job, we had a repair shop run by United States Marines. They had a sign that said, "If it ain't broke, we'll fix it until it is."
bongo 6 anyone?? how do you "upgrade" a bongo? you dont, you spend a good long while playing it and attempting to rise to its level.
Most of the mods are done to fender style basses IMO.
I absolutely agree, if you need (and I stress need here) to mod, then mod. It's that simple. It has nothing to do with the manufacturer. You need to get what YOU want out of the bass. Billy Sheehan took his original bass and literally chiseled out a place for an EB-0 style pickup to get what he wanted, and also started to scallop his upper frets with a dremel tool in a hotel room! He then proceeded to play that bass until it practically disintegrated. EVH couldn't find what he wanted, so he literally slapped a $100 neck on an $80 body, chiseled out a spot for a humbucker in the bridge position, spray painted the sucker, and went on to record 6 of the greatest rock records in history with it. (I admit, not necessarily a mod, more like home-brewed). You need a Badass bridge on your Ray? Go for it.Bovinehost said:I personally think you should do whatever you want to your own stuff in order to make it do what you want it to do.
Agreed, but if it works and gets something that YOU need, then I say mod away.Big Poppa said:My two cents......whatever you need to either make better music or feel better about your playing. The problems with mods is
1 90 percent of the time they are not executed with the same forethought or quality as we use
Instruments are tools, not investments. They are a means to an end - that end being the music YOU want to create. If you are worrying about loss of value to your instrument and sacrificing your music for it, then something is wrong with the picture.Big Poppa said:2. The person decides that they don't like it but have either sold the old parts or routed the bass causing permanent loss of value
Good advice here about finding a good tech to help.Big Poppa said:If you do mod please look for the most qualified tech and make sure they don't alter the basis routing and save your old parts either for you or the next owner