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MarkusZero
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Добавлен 9 сен 2008
A look at a mid-80s Ibanez Roadstar II bass
Pretty cool bass from the mid 80s. Plays very well!
Просмотров: 3 043
Видео
A look at a mid 80s Squire P-Bass
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.6 лет назад
A nice made in Japan P-Bass. It's medium scale, that's kind of different!
A look at a Squier Bronco Bass to Bass VI / baritone guitar conversion
Просмотров 20 тыс.6 лет назад
What happens when you want to convert a run-of-the mill Squier Bronco Bass to a Bass VI or a baritone guitar? This.
A look at a 1984 Quest ATAK 5 Electric Guitar
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.6 лет назад
Made in Japan, interesting 1980s look isn't it?
A look at a 2002 Squier Tom DeLonge Strat
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.6 лет назад
Here you go, my Tom DeLonge strat.
I have had mine since new 1983/4 Still all original except all wiring been redone. If you pull up t(e volume knob and play with the tone knob and put the switch in one of the 3 positionsI can’t remember, maybe the neck single coil, you get a fender Telecaster sound! Now that versatile! On stage I run through 100w Marshall and quad. This quest is my baby and my main hard rock axe.❤
Do you have a sample tone?
could you tune it to B fourths like how an actual 6 string should be tuned, or would the strings be too thick
I have a Bronco bass that I put a ridiculous amount of money into to make it a useful bass. Replaced and added pickup, switches, pots gears and more. With the Gibson mudbucker in the neck it will shake the rafters.
I've been drooling at how cool this is for a while and I'm finally taking the plunge to do one myself. Do you recall if you needed to get specific size ferrules for the thicker strings? and what those might've been? I know it was a while ago, but this is one of the more in depth videos I've found on the bronco > bass VI conversions. thanks for any help!
Hi bro! I've been thinking about to do one of those too. Did it worked for you? Do you have some advice or something?
I have this guitar bridge is not original nor are the string trees. Volume knob on mine is a push pull switch that separates the humbuckers
You are correct, good spotting!
I tried this bass back when it was in production. Should have bought it!!
I have 1 of these I bought it new The bridge on mine is black. Glad to run across this video most people have never heard of these things
Cool you kept it that long! I'm happy to keep the memories of the 80s alive!
I bought brand new black one in ‘84. Wish I had of kept it just for nostalgia
@@jeffgreen2448 surprisingly good for a cheap guitar. The look and sound of it definitely surprises people.
喋ってないで弾けよ
OK!
Which model Grovers did you use?
Would have been the typical guitar model Grovers. The Bass VI type strings taper down like guitar strings at the peg head end so guitar tuners work just fine.
What size dowel did you wind up using?
Most likely was a 3/8” dowel, going from memory… you can always drill out with a common 3/8” bit and then you know the dowel will fit.
I want to make one so bad from a cheap glarry guitar at my local pawn shop lol especially if it was possible to tune half a step down or even standard. Just the longer neck on a guitar is making me want one
I still have my quest attack 2 with seymour duncan 2 and 4.
Cool, that’s a keeper!
How much do you think a atak 2 is worth? Buying one today
Thats pretty suck lol
I’ll always take love or hate rather than indifference, so thanks for your reaction!
You can find these basses at pawnshops and online marketplaces for around $50-75 all day long. I bet it would scream with a JB in the bridge!
Agreed, they are cheap to find used (in North America at least) so perfect to experiment with! JB might sound good, try it and let us know...
You could've played Stay or Leave by Dave Matthews on the Bass VI (E Standard Capo on Fret 7) because I love that song.
I have one almost exactly like this one (mine is an '83). Do you know what model this is? Mine doesn't say. It plays wonderfully.
This one is an RB820, 1984 model. I agree, you pretty well can't go wrong with Ibanez Japan!
@UCdaMFbuEApZd1nkRTicb4EA The Bass VI is great for playing Violin pieces 2 Octave lower such as the Theme from Schindler's list.
New videos pls! ✌
Yeah, I've been pretty slack on the videos. Maybe I need to make a New Year's resolution for 2021, post more videos?
@@mzarich Yeah man even one a month. You obviously know what're talking about
What nut did you use? I’m planning similar thing but can’t find a nut
I forget exactly what I did, it's been a while.. Maybe I should watch the video, ha ha ha. Making one from scratch would be the best if you have the tools and some experience, or are willing to learn and buy the proper files. But if not, you should look at pre-slotted 6 string guitar nuts. Buy a few cheap ones to experiment. Even with pre-slotted, likely you will need to sand them down, or shim them up, to get it where you need it for each string. And of course with pre-slotted, you will need to make the slots for each string wider, where once again having the proper files makes a big difference. There are other hacker ways to do it without the proper files, if you search around for them. You can measure out the dimensions of the existing nut slot and have a look at Graphtech's web site as they show a bunch of replacement nut options with all the measurements. But the key thing is you are looking at 6 string guitar nuts, not 6 string bass nuts -- unless someone makes a replacement Fender Bass VI style nut... So it's pretty likely need to prepare to work on that nut! It's a learning experience. Lately I have been 3D printing nuts, actually!
can you provide me with a link to find this bridge? ive used the product code you've listed below and nothings come up, i cant find one anywhere. Much appreciated.
I wonder if Fender / Squier discontinued this part... I may have mentioned, I got it at Angela Instruments, but that was in 2013. You might want to start looking at a generic hardtail Strat bridge. The mounting screw holes may not all line up, but if the original unused holes are covered by the new bridge, that should be OK for most people I hope. The trick with a strat bridge will be dealing with the low e string. As in this case, it's got a much bigger diameter than a guitar's low e, you might need to be prepared to do a bit of drilling on the bridge plate to make it fit. I'm thinking of the bridges where the string ball end is anchored to the bridge plate through a hole, "top loader" style versus "string through body". On the other hand maybe a string though will be easier, it really depends on the bridge. When you look at the potential bridge, also look carefully where and how the saddle's intonation screw attaches to the saddle, and where that is in relation to the hole that the string comes through, especially on the low e. With some bridge and saddle combos, there may not be enough room to accommodate the thicker string, where it would be fine with a guitar's thinner low e. Maybe check out a site like Guitar Fetish, they have a few reasonably priced hardtail bridge options. Likely they are made out of cheap metal, so they will be easy to drill to mod them if needed! Do some thinking and visualization of it before you spend money on parts, if you can -- do it wrong in your head 99 times, and then do it right once in the real world!
@UCdaMFbuEApZd1nkRTicb4EA I just learned that famous Jewish Violinist Yehonatan Berick died. Well I played Bellas Finals arranged by Mark Brymer:ruclips.net/video/ONWU8c2Fcp4/видео.html on a Sitar w/ a Bow
MarkusZero Why not turn this into a Bass VI? You'll have a larger range. You could play Bellas Finals from Pitch perfect arranged by Mark Brymer (SATB Version w/ ShowTrax CD Full Performance Track for Audio)
MarkusZero If you turn your EB0 into an SG Bass VI I'd like to hear The Bellas Finals (SATB Divisi Voicing) arranged by Mark Brymer played on it w/ the Full Performance Track as our Background.
Are you a Fan of Pitch Perfect? Every Pitch Perfect Fan needs a Bass VI.
Man, I was just gonna offer to play Greensleeves...
@@mzarich That could be an intro right before we get into the Bellas Finals arranged by Mark Brymer. I love Pitch Perfect & the EXL 156 Strings have Colorful Ball ends.
@@mzarich Thanks for the Offer but I've already done that one on the Fryolin which is a Violin made out of a Frying Pan.
Interesting, you didn't have to change the pickup?
squire broncos come with a guitar pickup
@@lukeytac Say whaaaaaattt?
@@lordundhimself1310 i just bought a second hand bronco for £20 and I checked the pickup when fixing the electronics and it is indeed a guitar bridge from what I understand. theres 6 pole pieces spaced the same as my strat.
@@lordundhimself1310 currently finding it impossible to find a 6 string bridge. idk where this guy found it.
@@lukeytac Custom maybe?
@UCdaMFbuEApZd1nkRTicb4EA If you make your own Bass VI use D'addario EXL 156
I really wanna do this someday
It's a fun project, and not too hard to do if you are handy. These days you can buy a Squier Bass VI if you want six strings, but this is maybe more fun to do and a little cheaper if you can find a used Bronco bass.
@@mzarich yeah. But it's kinda hard living in a third world country so not all of the pieces and processes are as easy and cheap to find/do as they would elsewhere.
Did you use a guitar amp or a bass amp?
The short answer would be, use a bass amp for best results. It's tuned just like a regular long scale bass, the low E would be down around 41 hz, just like a Jazz bass or whatever typical long scale bass you can think of. Longer answer, if you want to use a guitar amp, you need one with a speaker and cabinet configuration that won't crap out with that low E 41 hz fundamental coming through, at anything beyond bedroom levels. I find that open back guitar combos are the most likely to crap out. Sealed cabs tend to do better, in general. But this advice I would apply for any bass played through a guitar combo amp / guitar speaker cabinet, not just a funky short scale 6 string bass.
What type of dowels did you use to fill the holes? What tool did you use to cut the headstock to shape?
Hey there, the easy solution would be to go to your local lumberyard or home improvement store, and just get whatever types of wood dowels they have, that has a big enough diameter to fill the hole that is there, plus a little bit more... I would suggest a lighter colored hardwood. You may not find maple, at least maple dowels are not common where I am. I used poplar, it works and it's cheap. You likely need to carefully bore out the turner holes to match the dowel size you bought, so it fits precisely. So a half inch dowel, use a half inch drill. I cut the dowel a little longer than it needs to be on either side of the peg head. Then I glue it in, and when it's dry I use a flush cutting saw to cut it level to the peg head on both sides. Now because the grain in a dowel like that runs in a different direction, it going to look obvious that there's a plug there. Simple solution, don't care about it and be punk rock. Otherwise, you can think about painting the head stock, at least the front side that everyone sees. There are fancier ways to plug holes and make it more invisible that I have been testing since I converted this bass, but this is supposed to be a simple DIY punk rock project, so I'll leave it at this for now!
I don't let not having every kind of tool under the sun stop me, so I will sometimes fabricate a solution to move forward. Cutting the head stock, now, just use whatever lets you do it accurately. Measure 10 times, cut once. I believe for this one I may have used a handsaw, the type you use with a miter box so it's not all flex-y and sloppy. Then again, I may have users a handheld jig saw; sorry, was a while ago. When I need to do a precise cut with a jig saw like that, I'll of course clamp down the neck to a hard surface, and then create a bit of a jig with a piece of straight metal for the saw to follow. Basically, you are creating a guide rail for the baseplate of the jigsaw to follow on the right angle. A bandsaw, if you have one, is good too. And if you're a bit sloppy, you can bust out the files and sanding paper to touch it up. Take your time, and watch your fingers!
G R E A T WORK!!
Hey, thanks!
Hey, I seen exactly the same model for $319 at local music shop is that a good price.
It depends of course, are you in the US, and what is your local market like for used gear? If it's in good shape, it's a great bass. I don't think a Squier or anything else you can get new for the same money is as good, in most cases. Check reverb for used prices as well.
@@mzarichyes New York, it might not be exactly the same its a PJ and it has two volumes a tone and a switch. The guy said it was active. The switch is a 2-way it probably goes from the p to the j?. It's a Japanese model and I see only high end models nowadays are only made in Japan, how come 30+ Japanese Ibanez' are so inexpensive? It feels and sounds nice. Ill probably hold off I'm saving for an American Jazz performer atm. Just bought a short scale this month lol 😅
Hey I have this guitar the original tone knobs are cylindrical type because the volume knob pulls out to split your pickups to single coils. Mine pretty much original other than the knobs cause they had rubber grips that end up dry rotting and falling off.
Thanks for the comment. Yeah the original knobs on this one were long gone when I got it. But there was a push-pull pot included, so interesting to know that they went with the extra coil split feature!
what bridge did you get, thinking of doing this myself
It would be from a Squier Musicmaster. But many others should work as long as the can accommodate the thickness of the larger bass strings. Getting bass strings with small ball ends, like those for a Bass VI or Schechter Hellcat is important.
So it’s a good guitar
I would say, yes... I have owned a couple of different US-made Strats, Japanese-made Strats. They are all within 80% of one another and this Strat. Put it another way, if you can't play it on this, you can't play it on a US-made Strat either!
Why?
It's like mountain climbing. Why do you climb the mountain? Because it's there.
Very cool! I am very curious about how heavy it sounds, like you had mentioned!
I wound up selling it before I had a chance to record it, moved onto the next project. Getting an early 70s Ibanez EB0 bass back to working shape at the moment. Yes, I recommend the red Lace Sensor when you need a single coil sized pickup in a project like this. They sound good in guitars as well. Quiet and high output. Similar to a modern humbucker bass pickup style. And usually you can get used Lace Sensors for a good price, some people just don't like them, kind of like EMGs for some people.
@@mzarich You can turn the EB0 into an SG Bass VI & use D'addario EXL 156 Strings for that.
@@RockStarOscarStern634 EXL156 looks like a pretty good choice, I like their strings in general. Yeah, the Gibson EB6, nice one for sure. But I went with a regular 4 string on this EB project it turns out. If I find a cheap Epiphone bass I may give it try.
@@mzarich You can also use EMG Pickups because they have a fun sound which is fun for Rock Music like Bellas Finals from Pitch Perfect arranged by Mark Brymer.
@@mzarich My name is Oscar Stern BTW & yes EXL 156 Strings are my Favorite cause they're colorful at the ball ends. Anna Kendrick from Pitch Perfect might love hearing you play Bellas Finals from Pitch Perfect arranged by Mark Brymer (SATB Score & ShowTrax CD Full Performance Track) on an EB0 converted into a Bass VI. Every Pitch Perfect fan wants a Bass VI. You could also do Lean on Me arranged by Roger Emerson (SATB Score & ShowTrax CD on Full Performance track) from Glee because sadly Bill Withers died & so did Naya Rivera. Every Glee Cast fan wants a Bass VI to shed light on Naya Rivera thanks to its low lovely sound.
Cool. My serial is C400139. I was wondering what it all meant.
Yeah, it was a common serial number format with the 80s and some 70s Japanese guitars. I've also seen it on Ibanez and Greco that way. Very handy compared to the random numbers on some US guitars.
how much does it cost now in 2019?
If you mean the used value in my local market, they go for around $500 Canadian, or roughly $400 in US dollars.
Actually, I've seen it for a lot more, even here in Japan. I got my medium scale JV jazz bass for an equivalent of $600 USD. And online, I've seen it for twice that price mainly in Europe.
My first guitar, lots one, got another. :)
They are fun and the price is usually right, I will grab another if I get a chance to see one for sale...
curious if you made any other changes since this video was made.
Not really, actually I wound up selling this bass so I could move on to the next project....
Nice work! I was planning on doing the same thing with a neglected Bronco I bought off eBay for real cheap and came across your video. I've got a set of guitar tuners, a tele-style barrel bridge, and a compensated bass VI replacement nut in the mail. Question: did you just eyeball the angle when you made the headstock cut? I didn't think about that when considering the tuner replacement...
Thanks, man. My approach was, I found some blueprint-type drawings of a Strat head stock. I printed that out at actual size, and then overlaid that on the Bronco head stock. It gave me the correct angle to cut. If you look at the actual Fender Bass VI, it's basically a Strat head stock shape. So you're just duplicating that onto the Bronco head stock by shaving off a bit of the wood from the Bronco neck. Another way to look at it, once you get your new six string nut, mount it on the Bronco neck; then, basically draw out your six lines from the nut so you have a straight shot to each tuner, where the string will begin to loop around the tuner You want a straight path from each nut slot to each tuner as much as possible. Once you do that, the angle you need to cut, and as well where you need to drill the holes for the machine heads, should be pretty clear (remember to measure twice, cut once!) I find making paper and/or cardboard templates is a pretty good way to mock things up before you start cutting wood. Good luck!
Mark Zarich great, thanks for the tips!
Awesome, I just did something pretty similar with a Violin Beatle style bass, going to be doing it with a Bronco soon too. If you want to see it ruclips.net/video/LgECyZ4HYW8/видео.html
Great vid! I'm looking into doing a similar mod myself and I'm wondering where I can get my hands on the bridge you used. Thanks!
Thanks, the bridge is Fender part "005-4945-000 Bridge Assy Musicmaster Gtr".
Thanks again! found one on eBay for a steal.
Which squier guitar did you get that bridge off of? And would you wanna post a video of how it sounds?
I bought the bridge as a Fender part, is is labelled "005-4945-000 Bridge Assy Musicmaster Gtr". So it should be off of a Squier MusicMaster. Will try to do a video of where I play it.
Did the Musicmaster bridge (fixing) screw holes line-up with the Bronco's original bridge?
@@papagibbon515 Sorry didn't see this message until now -- likely you sorted it -- but for the record, yes, the screws did line up, for anyone else interested.
@@mzarich OMG, that was freaky... I literally just ordered myself a Bronco yesterday after 8 months of procrastinating. 😅 Thanks for the reply too... and it's eery timing 😂
great build, i wish i could make one but hard to come by a lefty mustang
Thanks...