bovinehost
Administrator
no
roballanson said:![]()
The man is right. Dont play with it and take something like loctite to it unless you have either 20 years of bass luthering under your belt or really know what to do. Take it to a dealer man best way...., just imagine your worst nightmares of ruining your baby!!
Sorry problems with being in the UK and missing out on discussions. ignore this and congratulate yourself on a good job done.![]()
bovinehost said:I want a luthier to change my strings, too.
And not just any luthier.
I want Martin Luthier.
roballanson said:harsh jon harsh but fair...![]()
Joe Nerve said:I actually did take it to someone more "qualified" than myself to fix (the owner of one of the studios I rehearse in). He said, "forget about the locktite crap, I'm going to put clear nailpolish on it. That's all you need." I ran. He didn't touch my bass.
Yikes! I would have run too!
Joe Nerve said:WooHoo! Thanks for all the advice guys. Finally bought some threadlocker blue (medium) and did the minor surgery last night. It seems to have worked fabulously. The screws have a whole lot more tension when I turn them and I don't believe they're going to slip anymore. I'd be very surprised if they did and if they do then Mr. Bongo goes back to it's creator.
For those in the future that want or need to do this:
I didn't take off the pickguard. The blue stuff is very thin. I simply took the screws out, put a drop on the bottom third of the screw, wiped it around the screw with my finger so it just looked a little wet, and put the screw back in. I used less than a drop on each and they feel really secure.
ps. I immediately washed my finger as i noticed afterward the label said avoid contact with skin. guys don't read direction until AFTER they do something though.
bovinehost said:I want a luthier to change my strings, too.
And not just any luthier.
I want Martin Luthier.
bovinehost said:Sometimes re-reading this stuff makes me laugh like an idiot.