I tracked down a 1997 Epi Rivoli locally and took ownership of it last night. It is in generally good condition with the exception of the electronics.
(https://i.imgur.com/0X352aP.jpg)
The baritone switch doesn't appear to work and the pots and output jack are worn out. The pickup is one of those 1.4 k ohm imposters!
The bass has been to a luthier for some fret work, but not recently. The nut has been cut as deep as you can get away with and then shaved down and oddly rounded over.
(https://i.imgur.com/7tuYZbC.jpg)
The frets have been visited by the roundwound faeries and are pretty tarnished.
(https://i.imgur.com/au6OY8q.jpg)
The bridge is pretty dirty.
(https://i.imgur.com/Tr8ahwI.jpg)
The inductor is still present.
(https://i.imgur.com/v709HDs.jpg)
I plan to cut an EB-2 style pickguard as I don't like the profile of the Epi guard. At some point I might try and cut an Epi-profile guard from thick tortoiseshell material.
The wiring is a head scratcher. The switch makes or breaks a connection from the hot lug of the volume pot to the primary of a small transformer and then through a cap (22 nF) to ground. This is essentially like having one switchable setting of a Gibson varitone switch? More of a passive notch filter than a bass cut?
I might preserve the stock wiring harness and require the switch to put a 4.7 nF cap in series with the pickup as a bass cut; more of a baritone sound than a notched mudbucker tone.
(https://i.imgur.com/9j9GvHj.jpg)
You become naked.
The classic Invasion bass!
Looks to be in surprisingly good condition , those things seriously thump!
Those 90's Epis are really well built. I look forward to seeing the end result. Allparts makes a really good 30k replacement mudbucker if you are inclined.
The carcass is very solid! Beyond fretwork I think I can just buff out the finish a little and it is good to go.
Good to know there are other mudbuckers out there. I have an Artec one primed, but the pole spacing on it does look a little wide.
I had a Dimarzio Model 1 on the one I had , despite it having a pretty limited sound I regret selling it.
Great score. Looks beautiful!
I've spent a bit of time sorting out the fretboard.
Before:
(https://i.imgur.com/poa3AoO.jpg)
After:
(https://i.imgur.com/YrdMmcF.jpg)
I had to seriously level the frets. Beyond the usual playing wear some were lower than others, though not in any obvious pattern or distribution. The fourth fret was very low, for example. The frets themselves are very hard, so re-crowning and polishing was a bit of a mission.
Today I made a new pickguard! I found a shop selling repro EB-2 pickguards online. They helpfully included two rulers in their image, so I loaded this into MS Illustrator and resized until two inches on the rulers matched two two-inch long lines I generated in the software. Print at 100% and you have a template!
I transcribed this onto a sheet of MDF and cut with a jigsaw. I then toughened up the cut edges with CA.
(https://i.imgur.com/hyx3Cdk.jpg)
I cut the pickguard itself from 5-ply material, routing the pickup cutout (mud hole?) separately.
(https://i.imgur.com/TeLJGOs.jpg)
Yes that is a Hipshot Supertone that snuck onto the bass.
I also dredged a set of nickel-finish tuners and bushings out my parts bin. These are lighter than the stock tuners and have shorter shafts, so it cuts down on the wing-nut appearance of the headstock.
(https://i.imgur.com/2Pzshwb.jpg)
Man, that is looking nice!!!
Looking fantastic!
Thanks both!
I have it roughly complete!
(https://i.imgur.com/unPGD0y.jpg)
The pickguard is a second draft with a new outline. I added a slight concave arc to the shoulder, closer to an ES-335 outline. Gibson added meat to the pickguard up here, much as they did with the EB-0 pickguard. At a guess the mudbucker route made them too fragile up there? Who knows!
The bass sounds very rumbly. The bridge isn't grounded for some reason and I haven't added the switch back into the circuit. My thinking is to make it switch in a 1 nF cap between the pickup coils. This should block the low frequencies of one coil but maintain the high frequencies of both, so cancelling higher frequency noise in both positions while reducing the bass response slightly. It might work...
That cap trick is clever!
If it works! I killed the Artec pickup somehow, so back to the drawing board!
What annoys me slightly is the huge pickup route in this bass. The route is bigger than the pickup cover, and very deep. You have to coke bolt the pickup right down. The pickup wire route exists the pickup cavity right by one of the mounting screws.
The '60s basses didn't have this daft big route??
Nice work!
Aside from being one of the imposters, was there anything wrong with the stock pickup?
Quote from: Dave W on September 09, 2022, 11:04:20 PM
Nice work!
Aside from being one of the imposters, was there anything wrong with the stock pickup?
It had a low output and just felt a bit brittle and underpowered in the way it translated playing into tone from the amp. I was thinking about recycling the flatwork but installing new coils, or something else like that.
Many immediately ditched the stock pickup in the Rivoli reissue.
A lot of them got Dimarzios.
Quote from: Alanko on September 09, 2022, 03:16:59 PM
If it works! I killed the Artec pickup somehow, so back to the drawing board!
What annoys me slightly is the huge pickup route in this bass. The route is bigger than the pickup cover, and very deep. You have to coke bolt the pickup right down. The pickup wire route exists the pickup cavity right by one of the mounting screws.
The '60s basses didn't have this daft big route??
Be calm; you're the only one who will ever notice the difference.
Quote from: Alanko on September 10, 2022, 01:35:43 AM
It had a low output and just felt a bit brittle and underpowered in the way it translated playing into tone from the amp. I was thinking about recycling the flatwork but installing new coils, or something else like that.
I was wondering if there was a lower output problem on the E and G strings. That can be solved with the "Nail That Tone" mod, as described in this old thread: http://bassoutpost.com/index.php?topic=3047.0
Yeah I think the theory is that the magnets aren't wide enough to capture the full excursion of the outer strings.
I'm using La Bella short scale strings on this bass. They were installed by the previous owner. I think the E is a little quieter acoustically anyway, regardless of the pickup's capabilities.
Nice job cleaning it up! The 90's reissues are such great instruments.
In one of my Rivoli IIs I put in a modern SG bass neck pickup. Keep an eye out for a loose one.
The other one got a 60's pickup, and the "baritone switch" works much better with it than the stock pickup.
Quote from: Alanko on September 11, 2022, 06:52:25 AM
Yeah I think the theory is that the magnets aren't wide enough to capture the full excursion of the outer strings.
I'm using La Bella short scale strings on this bass. They were installed by the previous owner. I think the E is a little quieter acoustically anyway, regardless of the pickup's capabilities.
The Labella flats should be perfect for that bass.
I imagine the baritone switch in the reissue would work better with a higher impedance pickups? That is the grey area of guitar electronics for me.
My plan to get the pickup sitting about 3 mm higher is finished!
(https://i.imgur.com/VGpMfEk.jpg)
I plugged the stock screw holes, which were all over the place and pretty worn out. I also plugged the cavity for the inductor and tidied up the pickup cavity floor with a router. To do so I made a router template from an A4 sheet of MDF, designed to register and anchor from the middle bridge mounting stud and the sides of the neck.
I then fitted wooden inserts into the pickup cavity and painted everything black. Matt black aerosols and heat shrink tubing can make any old nonsense look semi professional!
(https://i.imgur.com/kFivgbK.jpg)
In fitting this all out it is pretty clear the factory pickup route isn't very square or even. It is wider on the treble side!
Very clever work on the pickup cavity.
You ought to see the cavity rout on my slothead EB-0.
Quote from: Dave W on September 15, 2022, 08:16:05 AM
Very clever work on the pickup cavity.
You ought to see the cavity rout on my slothead EB-0.
Looks like Berlin in June, 1945??? ???
Quote from: Pilgrim on September 15, 2022, 10:53:30 AM
Looks like Berlin in June, 1945??? ???
Just odd.
Busy with visitor, will take a pic in a couple days.
(https://i.imgur.com/m5Uuh4I.jpg)
Reassembled! My cheats Baritone switch does the job!
Makes me regret selling the one I had.
It has made me consider selling my Dearmond Starfire!
I grew up in a household that listened to classical music. My inroad into popular music was a Saturday morning radio show that played '60s hits. I think this is subconsciously what I think a bass should sound like?!
If I turn down the tone knob it sounds like my neighbour is practicing bass. You feel it as a subtle variance in air pressure!
A cheeky one-ply tort pickguard.
(https://i.imgur.com/Wfz0mqJ.jpg)
(https://i.imgur.com/j4Z1hIW.jpg)
(https://i.imgur.com/VClEsl3.jpg)
I made one in the conventional Rivoli shape, but I don't like the shape as much.
That's really nice looking material.
It is Incudo acrylic material. 3 mm thick, and basically a slab of brown acrylic with darker material swirled through it.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/193333005058 (https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/193333005058)
I went for 'bronze'.
You can get 3 mm thick celluloid tort material by Incudo, but I didn't fancy burning down my house battling a flaming A4 sheet of the stuff!
That looks fantastic!