Brooks Thread

Started by Basvarken, May 13, 2017, 01:29:23 PM

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Dave W

Nothing against the short scale, but there's no doubt that a 34" scale will have more note definition and higher harmonics. You can't escape the physics of scale length.

morrow

I find there's nothing quite like a cheap short scale run through a good amp.
Overall string response seems more even across the neck.

gearHed289

Quote from: Basvarken on January 10, 2023, 07:58:03 AM
Good news! The customer gave me the green light to go bulld the Quad Bass.
Looking forward to building this monster.

:popcorn:

ilan

Quote from: morrow on January 13, 2023, 06:02:51 AM
I find there's nothing quite like a cheap short scale run through a good amp.
Overall string response seems more even across the neck.

I hope you are right. All I can play for now are my short scales. On Dec 30 I had a scooter accident and fractured my LH wrist badly, had an operation and now a titanium plate and eight screws are holding my distal radius bone together, resulting in limited ability to bend the wrist inwards and stretch the fingers enough to play long scales.

Pilgrim

Quote from: ilan on January 19, 2023, 12:39:21 PM
I hope you are right. All I can play for now are my short scales. On Dec 30 I had a scooter accident and fractured my LH wrist badly, had an operation and now a titanium plate and eight screws are holding my distal radius bone together, resulting in limited ability to bend the wrist inwards and stretch the fingers enough to play long scales.

I'm sorry to hear that!  I hope it improves over time.

I can say that I've been happy with my short scale basses.  I think they offer a nice alternative.
"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila."

Basvarken

Ouch! Hopefully it'll heal well.
Speedy recovery!
www.brooksbassguitars.com
www.thegibsonbassbook.com

morrow

I'm sorry to hear of this ilan , and hope your recovery will be complete.
My switch to short scales had nothing to do with any difficulties dealing with a 34 in scale.
I just found short scales more comfy to play.
I was once a diehard Pbass aficionado. 

Dave W

Very sorry to hear this Ilan. I hope you can get back to playing whatever scale you want to.

ilan

Thanks guys. I'm practicing cautious optimism.

Basvarken

This weekend I finally completed the build of the Brooks EBN-MS-5.
It had been waiting on the electronics to be wired since december last year.
The five position rotary switch appeared to be made of unobtanium. But this week it finally showed up.

Here are the specifications:

- Mahogany Khaya body
- Quilted Maple top and headstock face
- Three piece Mahogany Khaya set neck. Glued in
- Blue burst gloss finish on top and headstock
- Matte finish on back and neck
- Ebony fretboard
?- Mother of pearl position markers
- Jumbo nickel silver frets
- 37-34" scale
- Buffalo horn nut ?
- Babicz Solo Rail bridge. Black
- Double action trussrod
- Two carbon reinforcement strips in the neck
?- Lace Alumitone Bass Bar pickup combination
- Pure Tone output. Black
- Volume and tone knob. Black
- Rotary pickup selector switch. Black
  • 1. humbucker in series
  • 2. neck side humbucker
  • 3. bridge side humbucker
  • 4. humbuckers in parallel
  • 5. humbuckers out of phase. With cap to keep low end

- Gotoh GB 350 lightweight bass tuners. Black
?- Gotoh Extra large strapnuts. Black
- Dingwall strings
- Weight: 3.88 kg









This bass was not built on commission. But I just wanted to build it as a sort of prototype. To try out a few new things.
There are a few mistakes/flaws that annoy me

- I think the bridge is a bit too close to the edge. This because I set into the body a little deeper than I had originally planned. I was afraid there wouldn't be enough grip for the neck.
- There's a glued in piece of (the same) khaya on the side of the body. The router had slipped and I needed to repair that piece. But somehow I flipped the piece over and new it reflects differently under a certain angle. Making the glued-in piece pop out quite obviously.
- I am not that happy with the way the blue came out. Some kind of chemical reaction between the stain, the wood and the lacquer makes the color lose some of its intensity. Plus the are strange spots where it almost looks as if there are salt stains under the lacquer.
- The string-T was not something I had planned. But I guess a didn't make the top nut high enough to keep the string in the slots. So the String T was an after thought.

Still a pretty nice bass. But I keep seeing all the imperfections... I did learn a thing or two during the build though ;-)

Here are pics of the build process.
https://www.brooksbassguitars.com/brooks-ebn-ms-5.html
www.brooksbassguitars.com
www.thegibsonbassbook.com

BTL

It looks great and has some really interesting and unique features. Congratulations!

slinkp

I think the blue is gorgeous.  Can't see the repair you are talking about either.
I am curious what it sounds like in the different settings!
Basses: Gibson lpb-1, Gibson dc jr tribute, Greco thunderbird, Danelectro dc, Ibanez blazer.  Amps: genz benz shuttle 6.0, EA CXL110, EA CXL112, Spark 40.  Guitars: Danelectro 59XT, rebuilt cheap LP copy

the mojo hobo

It is beautiful. Nice craftmanship there.

lowend1

If you can't be an athlete, be an athletic supporter

Dave W