• Ernie Ball
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  • Sterling by MusicMan

martinbassuk

Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2004
Messages
11
Hi guys
I have had my stingray 5 2004 Envy green bass for the last 8 years and absolutely love it.
It has the colour matched headstock and Gold logo.
I have noticed recently that the musicman, stingray 5 logo is gradually fading and disappearing. Has anyone else had this problem.

I know it's only cosmetic and certainly doesn't effect the brilliant tone if the instrument, just curious to see if this is common.

I only ever clean it with a clean dry cloth, never use any polish on the headstock.
Cheers

Martin
 

tbonesullivan

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 24, 2012
Messages
2,411
Location
New Jersey
that's odd. is the logo maybe tarnishing? the headstock should have finish over the logo. even the "unfinished" headstocks for EBMM guitars and basses are actually finished with satin clear coat.
 

martinbassuk

Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2004
Messages
11
Hi guys, thanks for the replies.
Here's a pic of the headstock, i took half way through cleaning and changing the strings.

photo.jpg

Thanks

Martin
 

Luc

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 17, 2004
Messages
931
Location
Utrecht, The Netherlands
I've seen that on a few guitars too. Only seen it with the gold lettering. Mostly JPs and LE's (Envy green, Radiance Red, Black/gold hardware)
 

martinbassuk

Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2004
Messages
11
Hi
I just received an email from EB customer services, probably AJ, thanks dude.
Brilliant service offering to re-do my logo. Also verifying the basses legitimacy, which is a great relief.
I was sure it was legit, as it plays like a dream, just wanted to verify the fact.

AJ, I will be in touch.

Thanks

Martin
 

Golem

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 30, 2005
Messages
2,278
Location
My Place
`

If the metal, presumably NOT solid gold and mainly base metal
[no pun intended but thanks for the laff anywho], was somehow
contaminated before clear coating, then what you see is what
you get. I had done some paintings using metalic dust, splinters
and debris as [textured] pigments. The metals were not clean,
as they were sweepings from a machine shop. The metals, even
under a protective clear coat, continued to change colors and to
darken over time.
 
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