double A said:As far as the difference between 30" and 32", the 30" will have less tension on the strings, which can be good or bad depending on how you look at it. The strings would be easier to fret/bend/pluck, but they are going to be a little more floppy as well.
My head also tells me that a 30" would be less punchy, a 32" more punchy, and then a 34" would sound "right", but after playing the 30" bass in the video, and hearing those TV Jones pickups, I would now reserve my judgement and judge each individual instrument on its own merits. The tone coming out of that bass was pretty darn great, I thought.
double A said:[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Nt8HwFkxmc&t[/youtube]
The Mooncaster Short Scale Bass body has risen, and it's going to eclipse all other short scale basses...at least for today!
We got 'em in stock now
BroccoliRob said:P and J might be weird on a carved top bass since they mount into the body and not with rings. Then agan, I suppose that Warmoth does offer wood mounting humbuckers and strat pickups on the guitar carve top models. So I dunno
amigarobbo said:Dinky P. The top where the pickups and bridges is flat, it's curves down from the flat centre to the edge, I don't know how they do it on the Mooncasters.
double A said:amigarobbo said:Dinky P. The top where the pickups and bridges is flat, it's curves down from the flat centre to the edge, I don't know how they do it on the Mooncasters.
However, the Mooncaster SSB is curved all the way across the top.
ghotiphry said:Aaron, I got a question. For the Mooncaster control holes, there's an option for toggle (Mooncaster). Is that a half-inch hole intended for a 3-way LP switch?
Fat Pete said:Digging the artwork!
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