MarkF786
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2011
- Messages
- 65
Today I received a new EBMM Bongo 5HH (Mantis Green, with a maple neck & board) and I've been really digging it - except for the damn fret sprout which is scratching up my hand! I have 3 other EMBB basses, and 6+ other EMBB guitars (sorry, I'm too lazy to count), none with fret sprout, nor do I have the problem with the many other guitars I own. I typically only encounter this with cheap guitars, not new $3K guitars/basses.
I'm in NJ, so it's definitely cold with fairly low humidity, but not absurdly so; it's about 40% humidity in my house. I've had about 40-50 guitars pass through my possession, with only a few cheap ones suffering as badly from fret sprout like this one. Possibly the dealer in upstate NY has their stock in worse conditions, and the neck will naturally adjust. Or another difference that came to mind is all my other EMBB's with a solid maple neck are roasted, while the Bongo in Mantis Green is un-roasted, maybe making it more susceptible.
Though I have the tools and experience to address the fret sprout, but sorry, for a $3K bass I'l return it before having to fix it (or worse, paying to have if fixed). Part of my mentality is, "if I screw something up fixing a new guitar, then I can't return it." And if ~20 other guitars in my house don't have this problem, neither should this one.
BTW, it's interesting the bridge still has those bolts on the sides, which have been eliminated from the StingRay. Any backstory to while the Bongo kept the bolts?
It's definitely a good bass, but my NBD is soured by the sharp frets :-/
I'm in NJ, so it's definitely cold with fairly low humidity, but not absurdly so; it's about 40% humidity in my house. I've had about 40-50 guitars pass through my possession, with only a few cheap ones suffering as badly from fret sprout like this one. Possibly the dealer in upstate NY has their stock in worse conditions, and the neck will naturally adjust. Or another difference that came to mind is all my other EMBB's with a solid maple neck are roasted, while the Bongo in Mantis Green is un-roasted, maybe making it more susceptible.
Though I have the tools and experience to address the fret sprout, but sorry, for a $3K bass I'l return it before having to fix it (or worse, paying to have if fixed). Part of my mentality is, "if I screw something up fixing a new guitar, then I can't return it." And if ~20 other guitars in my house don't have this problem, neither should this one.
BTW, it's interesting the bridge still has those bolts on the sides, which have been eliminated from the StingRay. Any backstory to while the Bongo kept the bolts?
It's definitely a good bass, but my NBD is soured by the sharp frets :-/