SugarMaple
Well-known member
A few months ago I bought a 2009 Sterling 4 HS, which is the best bass I've ever played, I absolutely love it.
It does seem to go through batteries faster than my 2007 Stingray 4 HS, though. The Sterling has been through 2 batteries (on the 3rd one now) in 4 months, whereas the Stingray HS went for approximately a year between battery changes. Both basses played by me only, similar usage patterns, etc. Maybe a little more rehearsal time per week on the Sterling since I love it so much, but certainly not 6x as much time, just a little more. Same batteries for both - Energizer 9V Industrials, which are good batteries.
My question is - is what I have experienced with battery life differences to be expected due to some characteristic of the 2 basses (parallel vs series wiring is the only thing I can think of), or is this just a weird battery eating Sterling HS? Even if the latter is the case, I don't care - the Sterling is Perfect, I will just have to watch battery life closer.
Any help is appreciated....
It does seem to go through batteries faster than my 2007 Stingray 4 HS, though. The Sterling has been through 2 batteries (on the 3rd one now) in 4 months, whereas the Stingray HS went for approximately a year between battery changes. Both basses played by me only, similar usage patterns, etc. Maybe a little more rehearsal time per week on the Sterling since I love it so much, but certainly not 6x as much time, just a little more. Same batteries for both - Energizer 9V Industrials, which are good batteries.
My question is - is what I have experienced with battery life differences to be expected due to some characteristic of the 2 basses (parallel vs series wiring is the only thing I can think of), or is this just a weird battery eating Sterling HS? Even if the latter is the case, I don't care - the Sterling is Perfect, I will just have to watch battery life closer.
Any help is appreciated....