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VIEW FULL LIVE VERSION : How bad is a plywood body? (Yep, that's what I said!)
BassWombat 12-31-2006, 01:59 AM Now I know that it's not tonally any good etc, but it is very light!! The only reason i ask is that I picked up a $20 Hondo bass from a pawn shop as it had some nice DiMarzio's in it along with good tuners and a decent aftermarket neck (although the pots etc are shot and it's not working) - obviously someone had spent some money on it. Anyway, I've got all the makings for a p-bass and was thinking about refinishing this 17-ply plywood body. As I said, it's very light and balances well so I figured I might see what happens. Of course I could also spend a hundred or so on a replacement ash body...
Anyone happy with a plywood body?
Mudfuzz 12-31-2006, 03:27 AM I have 3 guitars with plywood bodies, 2 are Frankies and the other is a old Decca someone gave me. They all get a very dano-ish sound. And I have to say I do like them:hiding: If you like the sound and it plays ok why not?
JimmyM 12-31-2006, 04:22 AM I don't mind plywood so much. I have a P copy with a plywood body, an old Kramer Focus guitar with one, and a 70's Epiphone acoustic with one. I love them all. I wouldn't put an expensive neck on it, but it should make a decent bass.
Relic 12-31-2006, 05:32 AM My motto - If it sounds good, plays good, and looks good who cares what the hell it's made out of? :P
Doctor J 12-31-2006, 06:58 AM My first bass was plywood and it had a fantastic tone. Once it's painted, who knows what it's made of? It's what it sounds like that counts.
BassWombat 12-31-2006, 12:28 PM Thanks all (and apologies if it's in the wrong forum, Joshua, but like you I didn't know where else... and I guess I will be repairing and setting it up!)
Fully agreed on the "if it sounds good who cares" principle, it was more just wondering if others have found gold in a plywood. It's also a good opportunity to do a refinish on the body and a complete set-up without potentially dramatic repercussions - what better way to start the new year than with some new skills...
Thursday 12-31-2006, 01:03 PM I wanna see where this ends at...
BassWombat 12-31-2006, 01:53 PM Um, me too :D
joeyl 12-31-2006, 06:22 PM Had a Korean Squier made of plywood. Worked fine until your screws get loose, such as straploks, pickup height screws etc. THAT plywood body and screws: stripping queen
ScubaSteve 01-07-2007, 08:10 PM I've got a plywood Korean Squier II P bass with a pretty nice maple fretboard neck. Dont know how to describe it compared to the typical alder and ash, but it sounds fine to my ears.
PilbaraBass 01-07-2007, 08:16 PM Not really a Setup issue, but I have no idea where to move it.
:D
what??? there's no forum for plywood bodies??? :D
ZombieGhosTrain 01-07-2007, 08:43 PM My Gretsch has a plywood body...it sounds great!
Basshole 01-07-2007, 08:52 PM Had a Korean Squier made of plywood. Worked fine until your screws get loose, such as straploks, pickup height screws etc. THAT plywood body and screws: stripping queen
Legit concern. Fix? Dowels.
joeyl 01-07-2007, 08:57 PM Legit concern. Fix? Dowels.
I did that for a while. It just would not hold up to gigging. Better fix: doweled the neck holes so I could fix it up to a new solid alder body :ninja: been perfect ever since.
But the plywood sounded fine. More like ash than alder I would say, because it was brighter sounding to my ears
Scott in Dallas 01-08-2007, 12:22 AM My Peavey strat has a plywood body. Sounds just like a Strat.
I bought a laminated p/j body off ebay that I used for experimenting. Changed pups, a couple different necks, aluminum and copper tape for shielding, tried combinations of wiring w/ series/ parallel, and a paint job.
Here's the end result.
I bought a lefty SX bass just for the neck, which required widening the neck pocket on the body as SX's are 2 9/16" instead of the standard 2 1/2".
Copper tape as the HVAC metal tape doesn't do so well.
Series /parallel pull up master vol.,vol for bridge when in parallel, tone.
And a rustoleum paintjob w/ clearcoat.
I sold the SX body on ebay so the neck W/tuners neck plate and screws was about $100.
All on a plywood body. It's my heaviest bass however. Heavier than my Yamaha BB605 5 string.
http://www.talkbass.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=43203&d=1160405925
TheApostlePaul 01-12-2007, 09:56 AM This is going to sound a little funny but it actually depends on the quality of the plywood. Like some of the other people I have seen plywood basses modded to be decent. I have also seen a couple of plywood basses and guitars that literally almost fell apart under heavy use.
The problem comes from the wood that they use to make up the laminate. If it is a soft wood chances are that over time, and if you play with force the screws start to pull out of the body. You can try and fix this with "plastic wood" type fillers, however, this will only be a temporary fix.
I would say mod it up as you desire. Worst case scenario if screws start pulling out you will have to buy a replacement body.
Planet Boulder 01-12-2007, 10:13 AM Interesting thread. I have an OLD Kent sunburst jazz body lying around at home that I may actually slap a cheapie neck on and add some cheapie pickups, etc., just to see what happens. It has no pickguard, but that's fine because the routing looks good without one.
It's heavy as hell, btw.
TheApostlePaul 01-12-2007, 11:28 AM It's heavy as hell, btw.
There is a common misconception that plywood bodies are really light. The opposite is actually often the case. A solid Alder wood body is generally much lighter than a plywood one, for example.
Planet Boulder 01-12-2007, 01:19 PM There is a common misconception that plywood bodies are really light. The opposite is actually often the case. A solid Alder wood body is generally much lighter than a plywood one, for example.
And that's actually what I would expect. I would think that all of the compressed glue inherent in plywood bodies would add to the weight.
molsen 01-12-2007, 05:42 PM i have an '88 kramer bass and it has a plywood body. sounds damn good though.
Hemitom 01-27-2007, 09:37 AM Interesting thread!
I just picked up a early eighties plywood bodied Cort Jazz bass.Lawsuit headstock, Black/white PG with a black block inlayed neck and cream binding basically a cheap geddy clone.
2 lbs heavier than my Geddy and IMO sounds pretty damn good.I will swap out the crap tele style bridge with a fender and add a set of Barts I have in the parts bin:D
Hey if it sounds good play it.
natasmi 01-29-2007, 07:23 AM This is plywood, sounds great to me.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v325/natasri/p-basspic2.jpg
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