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  • Sterling by MusicMan

jcidulka

Member
Joined
Jul 13, 2006
Messages
5
Hi there,

I recently acquired a 78 SR and it sounds great by itself (I'm new to the MM family). But as soon as I throw it in a mix of hard drums and loud guitars, it seems to drown out. So I guess I am wondering what suggestions you all have to get it to cut thru.

I am running a Trace Elliot V6 400 watt all tube head into an Ampeg 8x10. I have tried a few strings: Diadarro XLs and Chromes. I am thinking of trying out the Ken Smith Rock Masters as I have not had good luck with the XLs. But Chromes do work well on my 63 P bass.

Also, could I have an issue with the original epoxy prepamp or the pots? I really don't want to swap out the electronics - I'd rather keep it as close to 100% as original.

Anyway, if any of you cats have any ideas or suggestions, please let me know. THANKS!
 

Psycho Ward

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2005
Messages
5,053
Location
Elk Creek, VA and Murrells Inlet, SC
First welcome to the forum! Glad you're here.:D

Now on your SR, I'd put a set of Slinky's on her right away. Barring any problems with the pots or preamp you might wabt to try another amp.

I'm sure other members will chime in and be of more help. But a StingRay should cut with the best of them. I'm sure someone will help you out, this is a great family.:D
 

todd4ta

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 8, 2004
Messages
571
Location
Indiana
I have evolved very strongly into the 'less is more' camp when thinking of onboard EQ. And I find that's especially true and effective on the 2-band Stingrays.

I think in terms of setting the EQ flat on the bass, turn the volume all the way up, then give some slight EQ bump as needed. On a 2-band Stingray, this is the ultimate sound for my needs.

Double-check that your battery is fresh. The early Stingrays have a jack that doesn't switch off the battery when the cord is removed, so they may drain a little more quickly.
 

phatduckk

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 25, 2004
Messages
8,145
Location
San Mateo, California, United States
pickup height could be an issue here. check the FAQ at: http://www.ernieball.com/faq_content.php?subjectcode=mm_basses and see if your basses pickup hight is at least close to what the FAQ says is the factory spec.

too low = bad cuz its too low
and too high = bad cuz the magnets dont allow the strings to moved as much

ive experienced what youve reported when ive messed with my pup height. i was VERY surprised when i found out that having the pup too high cut some output... makes sense when u think about it but it was still a surprise at the time
 
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