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AnthonyD

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2005
Messages
3,683
Location
New Jersey
adelucia, I am sorry I didn't specify the post I was commenting on...it wasn't your thread opener I was commenting on, but a reply commenting on the other brands neck diving attributes.

No problem, Eddy-baby... It's all good! :)
 

phatduckk

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 25, 2004
Messages
8,145
Location
San Mateo, California, United States
to me its a visual thing as well. there's a ton of things that cant change the tone of the bass so i get what looks cool to me then tweak the other factors in order to get my sound. but honestly... gimmie any sterling, my stainless slinkys and ill get my tone
 

strummer

Enormous Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2005
Messages
4,518
Location
Safe European Home, Stockholm, Sweden
I find the Alembic statement to be pretty ignorant considering the pricing on their basses. You would think they would understand the natural, tonal differences between different woods.

Do they even use maple on their fretboards?
Also, I wonder if they might ever decide to make a bass that doesn't have the worst god awful neck dive in the business.

Let me guess: You are not particualrly fond of Alembics? :p
 

strummer

Enormous Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2005
Messages
4,518
Location
Safe European Home, Stockholm, Sweden
Maple=bright sound
Rosewood=dark sound

It's all in the color of the wood folks:D

By the way, why the hell aren't all basses made out of basswood?

This is just soo silly. Alembic has always tried to minimize the tonal effects of the wood, and so on their basses the differences are really small.
 

asianjeff

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Joined
Jan 24, 2007
Messages
317
Location
columbia, sc
aight, here comes the really newbie question, what if you dont clean your board at all... would that effect the sound, if so, how?

i just recently got a SUB 5 (my first EBMM) so i want to know the things i need to do to take good care of it.
 

tkarter

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Joined
Jun 22, 2004
Messages
5,921
Location
Kansas
aight, here comes the really newbie question, what if you dont clean your board at all... would that effect the sound, if so, how?

i just recently got a SUB 5 (my first EBMM) so i want to know the things i need to do to take good care of it.


If you don't clean the board. It shows it has been played. The frets are good it will always play fine.

The care one takes of the bass he likes is a personal preference.

A trashy car will get you across town just like a waxed up shiny new car will.

It isn't hard to keep a bass clean.

IMHO

tk
 

Slim

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 4, 2006
Messages
126
Location
Illinois near Chicago
I have rosewood and maple board SR5 and acoustically I can tell that rosewood sounds darker than maple but when it is amplified I really don't know because rosewood one is 2006 model with ceramic pickups and maple one is 1991 model with alnico pickup but I feel that maple board one needs less maintenance to trussrod adjustment maybe because it is 26 years old and the neck had settled in. Maybe the instruments get better as they age. Chicago weather is very hard on neck and I feel that rosewood is softer wood than maple so it maybe the reason it needs to be adjusted more often:confused:
By the way I use any cheap virgin olive oil to moisten rosewood board and it seems to do a good job:D
 

Oldtoe

Intestinal Poltergeist
Joined
Sep 10, 2004
Messages
3,215
Location
Paris, TX
Someone posted sound samples of a maple board Stingray and a rosewood board Stingray a long while back. I could tell which one was maple from the clips. Maple gives a more open, airy sound; while rosewood tends to produce a more focused tone to my ears.
 
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