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Topics - chromium

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31
The Outpost Cafe / Appice+Moon+Lee+Farley=Awesome
« on: June 04, 2010, 01:12:23 PM »
Ahhh.. drummers.



This guy is a solid player, given all the antics!  My favorite is when he starts doing "the robot" around 2:25   ;D

32
The Outpost Cafe / The Joy of Used Car Sales
« on: June 04, 2010, 01:01:20 PM »
This was kinda funny.  

The guy blogged some of the correspondence from the sale of his 2003 Land Rover:

    http://www.27bslash6.com/sold.html

(mildly NSFW due to language)


Here's an excerpt:

From: Brian Lawrence
Date: Wednesday 26 May 2010 11.04am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Car

Hi I saw your ad for the car I checked redbook and its not worth much because its pretty old and they hve lots of problems with the waterpumb and stuff. can come and have a test drive now if your home. will you take $1800 cash for it?



From: David Thorne
Date: Wednesday 26 May 2010 11.46am
To: Brian Lawrence
Subject: Re: Car

Dear Brian,
Thank you for your enticing offer. I was moments away from swapping the vehicle for three magic beans so your timing is impeccable.
When I was about ten, I swapped my Standish Selecta 12 racing bike for a broken microwave oven. Planning to construct a mind control ray, I connected the innards of the dismantled microwave unit to a tape recorder (which repeated the words "Let David paint his bedroom walls black") and plugged it into the mains. Unfortunately, the only results were being thrown across the room, receiving third degree burns to my hands and arms and forgetting how to do long division.
Disheartened that there have been only eighteen enquiries for the vehicle, despite it being advertised over an hour ago, I am not only prepared to deliberate your offer, but willing to throw in a pair of pants (beige, size 32L) and 4kg bag of squirrel food to sweeten the deal.
Regards, David.

33
Gibson Basses / Super 400 - Triumph Sighting
« on: May 11, 2010, 08:05:13 PM »
I had never heard this group Super 400, but happened across them whilst googling:




The bassist (Lori Friday) is usually sporting various Fenders, but while watching some of the live footage on Youtube lo and behold, a Triumph caught my attention:






34
Other Bass Brands / Paging the Stingray experts
« on: April 15, 2010, 11:45:28 AM »
I'm faced with a bit of a challenge.  I would like to liberate a few pieces of lesser used gear to fund (read: payoff purchase of) gear that will in fact actually be used, and as hard as it is (I do get kind of attached to basses), I'm eyeballing a few that unfortunately do not see much action these days at the chromium ranch.

One bass that I've been hanging onto almost entirely for reasons of nostalgia is an old Stingray fretless.  I used to play this thing all the time, and now I never touch it.  I don't plan to touch it much in the foreseeable future as I just don't do fretless anymore (well aside from the upright), and my tastes have sort of gravitated away from the MM stuff in general.  Kind of a double whammy for me, although it would really be a fantastic player for someone who would appreciate it.






I bought this one in or around 1986 from the Drum, Keyboard, Guitar shop (catchy name  :)) in Houston, TX.  Its a bit of an oddball in that the neck is badged as a "Saber" neck.  The s/n is B022141.  I know *zilch* about MMs, but I think that puts its build sometime around 82-83(?)

Even if I don't end up selling this, I'm still curious about what those more informed than I think about its possible lineage.  Is it a cobbed together mongrel?  Did the factory ever plant Saber necks on Stingrays?  Is there any useful info to look inside the bass to confirm (in the neck pocket, etc..)?  Also, any suggestions on what a fair price would be for something like this might help me too, in the event I do throw it to the wolves...

Thanks!!

36
Rickenbacker Basses / Chris Brubeck's Triple Play
« on: January 21, 2010, 12:58:32 AM »
I stumbled across a nice clip of Chris Brubeck playing his modified 4001 fretless:


37
Other Bass Brands / Gettin' all octal around here
« on: December 10, 2009, 09:58:18 PM »
While intended to capture images of basses traveling away from my home, the chromium welcoming-cam sent me this nice action shot of the UPS guy lugging a present up to the door today ;D



Man I love that guy.


Thanks to Nokturnal for tipping me off to this one!




I've been wanting an eight string for a few years now, and looking off and on for one.  A couple basses in particular appealed to me, this '80 Ibanez ST-980 model being one of them.  The craftsmanship of some of the Japanese guitars produced in this era is just fantastic, and as a child of the 70s I seem to have developed a weak spot for large slabs of brass and wood working in concert with each other.  

13.2 pounds worth in this case!  ...and with only 3.6% body fat according to the wife's NASA-spec bathroom scale.  Feels sorta like Santa is sittin' on my lap when I play it!










Hey there seems to be a pattern developing here!



Pretty on the inside?  I'm not sure what all the controls do yet, but it gets points for the varitone with chicken head knob:



Always wondered what this whole "QuadraLok" business was all about  ???.  It seems that it's about metal ferrules and (presumably) threaded inserts in the neck:



I gave it a good bath and setup, and I'm loving it so far.  I'll post some sounds once I get some time to make a recording with it.

 :toast:

38
The Outpost Cafe / Belated Spookiness
« on: November 04, 2009, 05:27:09 PM »
My two sons and I were having fun making some creepy sounds on the synthesizer the night before Halloween.  After they went to sleep, I put up a cam and recorded some stuff.  Nothing musical, just things that go bump in the night...   Mwa ha ha haaaa haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa



Be patient- it really starts rockin' out at around 1:10 when the creepy wind noises come in!    



(yes I'm easily amused, and this is technically the only time of the year I can make creepy wind noises without clearing the room)

39
Bass Amps & Effects / Alembic F-2B Rehab
« on: October 07, 2009, 09:15:34 PM »
My Alembic F-2B preamp bit the dust a couple months ago (loud hum, low output), and I finally got around to looking at it the other night.  I took some preamp p0rn pics along the way to share with anyone who's interested in this stuff.  This is my first attempt at repairing any tube-based gear, and so I took some time to read up about it (hence the not getting to it for two months) and try to approach it safely.

This is a two channel preamp inspired by Fender's Dual Showman.  At the heart of each channel is a 12AX7A/7025 tube, and I've been using it as it came to me for the past couple years - with a newer Sovtek in channel A, and an Amperex in channel B.




Its my only pre, and I use it for home recording with bass, guitar, and keyboards.  With the latter, I usually run both channels in stereo.  The different tubes that came in it gave a slightly different character to each channel.  That was cool in a way, but for stereo use I decided a matched set might be better.  I found a nice old pair of GE tubes on ebay for not much, and decided to give those a spin:




In an effort to avoid barbecuetion, I made a little contraption to discharge the power supply filter caps.  Figure I'll get some reuse out of this, since I also want to go thru and recap the tube amp in my old Hammond at some point in the future.  I just took an old alligator clip test lead and soldered a resistor inline (I used a 10W, 150 ohm).  I clipped one end to ground, and held the other against the + lead of each cap one-by-one ~30 sec. each, and double-checked 'em with a voltmeter afterward to make sure they discharged:





I guess you can also do this with a screwdriver shorting across the leads, but I don't know how bad the sparks would be. :o  Didn't want to scar up the circuit board.


I found that the failure on this one was due to a broken solder joint on one of the power supply filter caps at the circuit board.  The strips of foam glued to the covers that kinda holds these heavy caps in place and keeps them from getting jostled around had disintegrated, and over time the connection probably just gave way:




I fixed her up and threw some new foam in.  I also converted it to a grounded 3-prong plug, and cleaned up the AC wiring a bit.

Fire baaaad!


Heat shrink goooood!:


New (to me) toobs:



I wanted to replace those power supply caps while I was in there, just because they go bad over time and if they're the originals then they are wayy overdue for replacement.  The only similar spec replacements I was able to find were ~$20/ea from Allied!  Decided to wait and look around a bit.

Well it sounds great now, I didn't fry myself, and I got a small glimpse at how deep the rabbit hole goes when it comes to selecting preamp tubes!  Never really looked into any of that before... just used 'em as they came.

40
Mark's comment in another thread about avoiding the temptation of bassnw of course prompted me to immediately visit their site, and drool over stuff that I don't need (but want anyway).

In the process, I came across this freak of nature:








I don't recall ever seeing this contraption before, but apparently it was marketed as the "Soundborn Octopus", and is a retrofit bridge designed to facilitate the conversion of a 4-string into an 8-string bass.

Has anyone here ever handled a bass with one of these installed?  I don't know that I would ever try to seek one out, but I'm still curious about it.  Seems like a nifty idea with an extremely limited target audience!  Guess that explains the rarity.

41
Thought ya'll might like to see one of these BaCH birds partially nekkid!

My grain-filling job ahead suddenly looks a bit easier than I expected  ;D


















Closet Fenderbirds! ;D   The body core looks mahog (you can barely see it there in the contour), with some sort of outer laminate that has a tight grain, presumably to make finishing easier.  I noticed the maple neck when I was swapping tuners the other day.

These pics were taken after three hits of aircraft stripper.  I'm on the fifth now, and its almost bare with only gentle scraping.  I started with a test spot under the pickguard area, and found that the original finish gives way fairly easily.

42
I'm giving the BaCH NR a little makeover, and now I'm planing to strip and refinish it as part of this effort.  In the process of filling the grain in prep for the new finish, is it appropriate or advisable to use the grain filler to plug the old pickguard holes?  Most of the old pickguard holes will be covered by the new 'guard, but I may also relocate the tailpiece closer to the bridge - and in that case would need to fill those holes too.  Should I plug the holes first with a small dowel prior to filling? 

The specific wood filler I have is that oil-based Bartley paste wood filler.

Thanks!

43
The Outpost Cafe / Something to do when your guitarist takes a break...
« on: August 08, 2009, 11:12:18 AM »

44
The Outpost Cafe / Smells Like Rick Astley
« on: July 20, 2009, 02:15:37 PM »
This is just wrong on so many levels  ;D




45
Gibson Basses / St Vincent's Thunderbird
« on: June 30, 2009, 09:58:42 AM »
Just posting some live Thunderbird content for your enjoyment, as seen backing St. Vincent (a.k.a Annie Clark)



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