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azzy_wazzy

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Jul 10, 2005
Messages
1,909
Location
Leeds, UK
When I'm tweaking my bass (set up - saddles and trussrod etc), do I do this acoustically or with the amp plugged in?

Only ask as I'm trying to eliminate some buzz around the 12th fret (only really hanging around on the D string now) and can't shift it! Thought it may be as I wasn't plugged into my amp...

Which is it? (Apologies for the blondness in advance) :D

P.S. Blame it on trying to find a free program to let me stick the DVD of my jump online! Yay! Youtube should have it up shortly and will post a link asap.

Geez... look at me hijacking my own thread :rolleyes:
 

azzy_wazzy

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Jul 10, 2005
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1,909
Location
Leeds, UK
Unplugged.

You should still be able to hear the buzz.

So as long as it's buzz-less on the amp, it's ok??? Even if I can hear it unplugged?

I've read loooooads of set up qus on here today but none seemed to cover this :)

Gah I have brain-ache... got my jump footage into viewable format, but the damn file is too big to upload... Youtube has a limit of 100MB, and this file is 800 and something!!!

I think I'm gonna go to bed and forget about all this till the morning :D
 

bovinehost

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Jan 16, 2003
Messages
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Dall-Ass, TX
I don't give a ratzass, personally, if my bass makes a little noise unplugged as long as it sounds good amplified.

Because I always gig it with an amp, I guess that's why.
 

bassmonkeee

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Apr 25, 2004
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4,628
Location
Decatur, GA
I don't give a ratzass, personally, if my bass makes a little noise unplugged as long as it sounds good amplified.

Because I always gig it with an amp, I guess that's why.


I'm the same way. If I can't hear it through an amp or headphones, it isn't there.
 

RockinRayDuke

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Joined
Aug 4, 2003
Messages
474
Location
DFW, Texas
That's why I listen to it both ways. There's no way my Bongo will be completely without a little string buzz but on the whole it's pretty buzz-free. Sometimes on the G for example it buzzes from my crummy technique but I like where the string is and can compensate for it.

Plus I like the neck almost straight which can be a problem on other basses but on a Bongo (and any other EBMM bass I've had) isn't really an issue. I put a very slight amount of relief in and tweak the saddles. I played the BP Bongo after Jack got it and it had amazingly low action and didn't need tweaking for quite a while. That's what I shoot for on mine.
 

adouglas

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Aug 12, 2005
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5,592
Location
On the tail end of the bell curve in Connecticut
I don't give a ratzass, personally, if my bass makes a little noise unplugged as long as it sounds good amplified.

+1...if the action is high enough to get rid of all buzz, all the time, no matter what, it's too high for comfort.

One of the coolest things about EBMM basses is that fantastic little adjuster wheel...tweaking the trussrod is so easy that if it's just a hair off I'll go ahead and give it a nudge at the drop of a hat. With other basses, where I'd have to remove a cover and go find a special wrench, I'd only adjust it with major changes in the weather. So I'd wind up adjusting it higher than it needed to be. I don't need to do that any more.

I've gotten to the point where I no longer need to pull out the mechanic's scale (little steel ruler, graduated in 64ths of an inch) to check string height. I can tell if it's right just by looking at it. I'm sure I'm not as accurate as the ruler, but it's plenty close enough. Anybody else find this to be so?
 

Aussie Mark

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Nov 9, 2003
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5,646
Location
Sydney, Australia
I never measure anything. Ever. And never will, probably.

Just a quirk, I guess.

Not a quirk at all Jack. I don't measure either when I'm setting up a bass. If I'm using power tools I'll measure, so I don't get electrocuted or lose a limb. Setting up a bass is not going to kill me, so I go by feel rather than dimensions.
 

Max

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Sep 25, 2006
Messages
66
Location
Greater Seattle area, WA
Whenever I set up my bass, I always try to eliminate all fret-buzz whatsoever, including accoustiacally, but really I guess it only matters if it doesn't come through on the amp.

As for measuring, I don't recal my bass ever touching a ruler of any sort.
 

SteveB

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Sep 3, 2004
Messages
6,192
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
When I setup my guitars, I don't mind some buzz acoustically, as long as it can't be heard through the amp. So, there's one guitard's view. :D
 

Bill

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Sep 4, 2005
Messages
2,317
Location
Denham Springs, LA
I generally set up mine acoustically. I pluck the strings slightly harder when the bass isn't plugged in, so if I eliminate buzzing that way, I'm guaranteed to not have buzzing when I'm plugged in. Works great for me! My Stingray neck feels absolutely perfect.
 

hankSRay

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Joined
Aug 5, 2004
Messages
848
Location
Yonkers, NY
My Red Sparkle buzzes a lot unplugged because of how I set the action, plug it in and you wont hear any buzzing. Go Figure.
 
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