toomanyslurpees
Well-known member
Ok, so I have a very well played 85 SR4 that I totally love, it's been my go to gigging bass since I bought it over two years ago (also the busiest two years of gigging I've ever had). I just noticed I have a lump and a crack in the fretboard between the nut and first fret. I took it to my repair guy who things a u shaped washer in the neck may have turned around at the top of the truss rod and I'm looking at having to sink a couple hundred bucks into it. this in addition to the neck having developed a pretty significant ski jump where it meets the body, and theres also an uneveness in the fretboard around the seventh fret and I have to keep the action higher than my 2001 SR4 to keep this part of the neck from buzzing. I don't know if it's a sign of the health of a neck, but if I loosen the truss rod all the way the action is extreemly high (as in 3/4" high) I love playing the bass even with having to set it up to compensate for the inperfections of the neck but now with this crack it's has me debating what to do being that it also has a mucher thinner profile than my 2001 and I like chunkier necks.
so would you:
a: put the money into getting the neck in the best shape I can, even if it my not be my favorite profile but perserve the originality of the bass being that it is the first year of the EBMM stingray. I just don't know how much I'm looking at, it could be almost as much as a replacement neck (I have been talking to customer service) and I'm not sure the neck won't give me more grief in the future.
b: get a replacement neck, it means not have the originality (having to give up the original neck is a big con to this option) but having a good solid neck in a chunkier profile that will have tons of life in it. it also means routing out the notch in the body for the truss wheel and modifying the neck for the 4 bolt neck plate.
I'm seriously torn, on one hand it's an original vintage stingray (minus pickguard and one tuner) so I think I should keep it original on the other hand it's a beat up player and replacing the neck would probably make it the best player it could be for a bass I doubt I would ever sell. hmmm.
so would you:
a: put the money into getting the neck in the best shape I can, even if it my not be my favorite profile but perserve the originality of the bass being that it is the first year of the EBMM stingray. I just don't know how much I'm looking at, it could be almost as much as a replacement neck (I have been talking to customer service) and I'm not sure the neck won't give me more grief in the future.
b: get a replacement neck, it means not have the originality (having to give up the original neck is a big con to this option) but having a good solid neck in a chunkier profile that will have tons of life in it. it also means routing out the notch in the body for the truss wheel and modifying the neck for the 4 bolt neck plate.
I'm seriously torn, on one hand it's an original vintage stingray (minus pickguard and one tuner) so I think I should keep it original on the other hand it's a beat up player and replacing the neck would probably make it the best player it could be for a bass I doubt I would ever sell. hmmm.
