Zenrad
Member
I'm a new Stingray owner, simply in love with my new bass
I've been wanting a 'Ray for the past 20 years and finally got one and I've been staying up way too late every night playing it - just can't keep my hands off of it.
I'm curious about a design element on the Musicman basses, I did some searching but didn't come up with an answer. I notice that the pole pieces don't line up under the strings, the outer two strings on a 4 string are over the inner edge of the pole piece, the A and D are more or less centered. It's a bit more pronounced on my SLO neck (and I guess the Sterling) with the more narrow string spacing. This is obviously by design, and it doesn't affect much at all unless I really bend the G string at the higher frets, but I'm wondering why it's made that way?
Here's my guess - the size of the pole pieces requires them to be a certain distance apart, so the A and D strings are centered and the others are placed an equal distance a part. Rather than make the pole pieces smaller which could change the sound, they are left larger and line up the way they do.
Again, just curious.
Thanks.
I'm curious about a design element on the Musicman basses, I did some searching but didn't come up with an answer. I notice that the pole pieces don't line up under the strings, the outer two strings on a 4 string are over the inner edge of the pole piece, the A and D are more or less centered. It's a bit more pronounced on my SLO neck (and I guess the Sterling) with the more narrow string spacing. This is obviously by design, and it doesn't affect much at all unless I really bend the G string at the higher frets, but I'm wondering why it's made that way?
Here's my guess - the size of the pole pieces requires them to be a certain distance apart, so the A and D strings are centered and the others are placed an equal distance a part. Rather than make the pole pieces smaller which could change the sound, they are left larger and line up the way they do.
Again, just curious.
Thanks.