The G-3 doesn't come with a hardshell case and I doubt Gibson even offers one. Short of an original '70s-'80s case will any of the other similar shaped Gibson cases work for a G-3? I see Triumph cases, Les Paul cases (which I think are much smaller), but I wonder if any are suitable for the G-3 body shape.
Thoughts?
Didn't Epiphone offer a bass in that shape a few years back? I was running into NOS Ripper & Grabber cases all of the time when I was looking for Les Paul Triumph cases. Here is a rectangular case on ebay.......
http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-CASE-FITS-GIBSON-RIPPER-GRABBER-G3-BASS-GUITARS-/170989505109?pt=Guitar_Accessories&hash=item27cfc4ca55
The Epiphone case from a few years back will fit. And the old Gibson Ripper/Grabber/G-3 form cases, but nothing else. The body is just too wide.
Which Epi case?
Interesting, I just made a test and tried to put my new G-3 into the '73 Ripper case. The body slipped right into the case but the headstock with the tuners was way too wide. Should have thought about it but it makes sense since the G-3 headstock is REALLY wide at the base, probably an inch or two wider than the '70s models.
This rules out original Ripper/Grabber/G-3 case for sure.
I did find a photo on the interwebs of the Grabber 2 in a hardshell case, which gets wider as it heads up the neck towards the headstock.
(http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l111/bigtreebluesea/gibsonbass-192022506724348690_zps60ff6dae.jpg)
Duh - you're right Denis, I forgot about the Grabber II! Even though I have one.
Epi brought out their Ltd Ed "Ripper" (more a GRipp3r really, but a nice bass) some years ago, a non-form, rectangular case with huge compartments was available for it, though not widely. My Prototype has one though, it fits well even though the Epis have slightly larger bodies, they obviously copied the very first Rippers for them.
Look, if you run into issues getting a Grabber case that fits I can dig out one of my old ones and exchange it against your G-3 gig bag, I'd rather have a gigbag than a case. Once my G-3 is here, I would test it with a case that fits snugly and send that to you.
Thanks, Uwe! When I was writing the post all I was thinking about was the big ole body, not the headstock! Good thing I didn't buy an old Ripper case and THEN find out!
I'll see if I can find one of the Grabber II cases.
Some genius at Sam Ash lost the original G-3 gigbag (and also the paperwork for it) and so the manager gave me a Tour Grade Artist Series gigbag. It's a nice bag but since the G-3 is round and the bag has a squarish bottom, the G-3 sits with all it's weight on the rear strap button, a recipe for disaster!
By the way, when are you expecting your G-3 to arrive? I'm telling you you are going to love it!
Veronica Steed has it - wartime reparations for her deceased husband or so. Once you guys have something - like Texas - you never give it back! :mrgreen:
Possession is 9/10ths of the law!
They have a joke in Alaska: "Let's split Alaska in half and make Texas the third largest state."
"Possession is 9/10ths of the law!"
:mrgreen: :rimshot: :rimshot: :rimshot:
Indeed it is. But Mark has/had permission. I'm a secret fan of his DNA traces.
Quote from: uwe on February 18, 2013, 06:37:27 AM
"Possession is 9/10ths of the law!"
:mrgreen: :rimshot: :rimshot: :rimshot:
Indeed it is. But Mark has/had permission. I'm a secret fan of his DNA traces.
It's very carefully upstairs in my small practice room, very safe and controlled temperature. I take these things pretty serious actually! I can't begin to express how fantastic this bass sounds, especially played fingerstyle, I have it tuned a half step low to play some Smithereens tunes.........Whoa! This bass has a voice ;D
My hellish schedule will relax in 4 weeks, I'll have a quarter away from teaching, looking forward to it!
This case should fit: http://www.djmmusic.com/Itemdesc.asp?ic=STD-EBP
Funny you should mention the Smithereens...I never heard of them before this weekend...
Saw a PBS concert show at about 7:00 AM Sunday morning..The Smithereens...they literally brought the house down. Great show.
Quote from: TBird1958 on February 18, 2013, 08:30:06 AM
It's very carefully upstairs in my small practice room, very safe and controlled temperature. I take these things pretty serious actually! I can't begin to express how fantastic this bass sounds, especially played fingerstyle, I have it tuned a half step low to play some Smithereens tunes.........Whoa! This bass has a voice ;D
My hellish schedule will relax in 4 weeks, I'll have a quarter away from teaching, looking forward to it!
I still cannot believe no one else has tried out the G-3.
Quote from: patman on February 18, 2013, 09:40:23 AM
Funny you should mention the Smithereens...I never heard of them before this weekend...
Saw a PBS concert show at about 7:00 AM Sunday morning..The Smithereens...they literally brought the house down. Great show.
They can still bring it. But wow, Pat DiNizio is just enormous now. Look at some of their 80s live videos, if it weren't for his voice you'd swear it was a different person.
They're totally a working class blue collar band....Ok, DiNizio *is* a bit of an odd Boheimian but, they just rock and roll without all the usual crap. I have always really liked their no nonsense approach and Mike Mesaros is the true rock n roll soldier on the bass, yet comes thru with some really fun lines on "Blue Period" "In a Lonely Place" and my fave "Too much Passion". I thought I'd read somewhere that DiNizio had suffered some illness and the weight gain was a result of the medication.........I could well be wrong there tho.
Quote from: Denis on February 18, 2013, 10:43:45 AM
I still cannot believe no one else has tried out the G-3.
The whole Ripper/Grabber/G-3 family is chained in the crypt and hidden from sight. No one ever really thought them attractive, certainly not in the seventies. It was a conscious move to play them just the same.
Over the decades, they have grown on me. I now think their behemoth flat body friggin' cool and different from anything else. Elegant in a way a JB, Ric or a TB is elegant they're not though. But they were made for a working man's appeal.
Quote from: TBird1958 on February 18, 2013, 02:48:20 PM
They're totally a working class blue collar band....Ok, DiNizio *is* a bit of an odd Boheimian but, they just rock and roll without all the usual crap. I have always really liked their no nonsense approach and Mike Mesaros is the true rock n roll soldier on the bass, yet comes thru with some really fun lines on "Blue Period" "In a Lonely Place" and my fave "Too much Passion". I thought I'd read somewhere that DiNizio had suffered some illness and the weight gain was a result of the medication.........I could well be wrong there tho.
Pat supposedly had some kind of nervous disorder, I never heard that it had anything to do with his weight gain but it's possible.
No nonsense rock is a great description. Mike Mesaros had some simple and great bass lines. Drown In My Own Tears, Behind The Wall Of Sleep, and of course Blood And Roses. (apologies for the Fender and Rick content)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqML7WbOun8
Behind the wall of sleep and blood and roses are great songs!! I've always liked this band. My brother went to a house tour that Pat did (I think last year) where he went to different peoples houses across the country and played a show. Jon said it was a great experience.