fenderbluesdude
04-11-2004, 06:59 PM
i have a fender jazz bass fretless that is. and i love the sound of roundwounds on it, it sounds absolutly beutifull. but i recently noticed that i am tearing up my neck really badly. i herd if you put epoxy on it, it will hold up to the roundwounds, i think jaco pastorius did it. i dont care if it turns my neck brown. i just want to learn how to do it. if i cant do it on my own how much will it cost?
Syberslack
04-14-2004, 05:35 PM
I think Jaco used Marine grade epoxy--the kind that makes boats more water tight. I am thinking any epoxy you have, would have to be brushed on, and sanded countless times to get it leveled right. I once tried that epoxy glue stuff you buy at a hardware store, but it was more trouble than it was worth and ended up starting over and doing polyurethane. I would just buy a can of polyurethane and spray it on and be done with it.
Thunderchicken
04-28-2004, 02:29 AM
A really great place to have this done is HG Thor Lab (www.woodwiz.com/guitarlab/epoxy.html)
They do incredible work -- it's not cheap but they will put a finish on your neck that will take any string in sight and the finish will outlast the rest of your guitar!
They guarantee their work and are great people to deal with. They are doing a '82 Fender Jazz fretless neck for me now and I can't wait for it!!
Check out the website - other cool things there as well!
TC
:bassist:
godoze
05-03-2004, 01:28 PM
do you like the sound of your bass right now ? It will sound different with the epoxy coating. Is it an ebony board ?
Thunderchicken
05-03-2004, 02:09 PM
do you like the sound of your bass right now ? It will sound different with the epoxy coating. Is it an ebony board ?
I got the epoxy finish as an 'alternative' and choice for me -- I have 2 nearly indentical Fender J-basses and got the finish on one neck and kept the other natural. I use rounds on the exoxy neck and flats on the natural.
The rounds on the epoxy finish is very bright - almost to the point of mimicing a 'slap' or 'pop' when wanted. It lets me really stand out in the mix in the fusion quartet I play with. I can get as aggressive as I want with my attack and the epoxy board could care less. That being said, you can get nice mellow 'mwah' from the board with proper technique.
It's a rosewood board, but with the epoxy finish I would imagine that the tone quality of the wood is kind of lost -- you're playing on the finish instead of the wood.
Saint
05-03-2004, 08:37 PM
i have a fender jazz bass fretless that is. and i love the sound of roundwounds on it, it sounds absolutly beutifull. but i recently noticed that i am tearing up my neck really badly. i herd if you put epoxy on it, it will hold up to the roundwounds, i think jaco pastorius did it. i dont care if it turns my neck brown. i just want to learn how to do it. if i cant do it on my own how much will it cost?
Coating your fretless board will protect it, but it will also alter the sound. Generally, you will get more high end response than you will with an uncoated rosewood board.
I think the easiest way to go about this is to use Master Gel which is a thick polyurethane liquid that you can apply in layers using cloth (no brushes or spraying). You'll need some ultrafine sandpaper and I highly recommend getting the medium and fine grade polish from Stew Mac to get that professional look.
Best of luck!
Trevorus
05-03-2004, 08:59 PM
http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?s=&threadid=81180&highlight=slap+plate
http://www.talkbass.com/forum/showthread.php?t=82916&highlight=fretless+mylar
here are a couple threads on the coating with mylar. You might give that a try, since it does not require sanding.