BongoBilly
Member
I've been playing my Bongo a little bit this week and everything seemed fine.
Went downstairs just now to get ready for our last rehearsal before our first gig next Saturday, when I noticed my brand new bass had a bad bow in it. It's a four string, and the A and D strings buzz to the point of not being able to fret the note on the first two or three frets.
It's been very, very humid today. Can it happen that quickly? Can it just go out like that over night?
How quickly should I be willing to start cranking that truss rod? I've never done it before so I'd rather take it to an expert, but I've got practice in an hour. I don't think I will touch it... Plus I'm pretty bummed that after spending all that money on the bass, I'm going to probably have to pay for a set up now. Damn.
Thank EB for the forethought of making the truss rod so accessible. Still, that was a bit of a shock.
Went downstairs just now to get ready for our last rehearsal before our first gig next Saturday, when I noticed my brand new bass had a bad bow in it. It's a four string, and the A and D strings buzz to the point of not being able to fret the note on the first two or three frets.
It's been very, very humid today. Can it happen that quickly? Can it just go out like that over night?
How quickly should I be willing to start cranking that truss rod? I've never done it before so I'd rather take it to an expert, but I've got practice in an hour. I don't think I will touch it... Plus I'm pretty bummed that after spending all that money on the bass, I'm going to probably have to pay for a set up now. Damn.
Thank EB for the forethought of making the truss rod so accessible. Still, that was a bit of a shock.