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-   -   Right hand fingernails put little dents into bass while slapping (http://www.talkbass.com/forum/f21/right-hand-fingernails-put-little-dents-into-bass-while-slapping-955071/)

smither12 02-03-2013 06:21 PM

Right hand fingernails put little dents into bass while slapping
 
While I'm slapping my right hand fingers come down on the side of my bass next to the string and over time it has creating dents (from my finger nails and they are not long either)on my Fender Precision american standard. Does this happen to anyone else? What can i do do stop this?

topo morto 02-03-2013 07:13 PM

You must have a very different slapping technique to me.

Doesn't the pickguard keep things happy?

pogipoints 02-03-2013 07:16 PM

This is what I've been using: http://www.stewmac.com/shop/Pickguar...xst=3&xsr=3220

It's a stick-on mylar sheet, that you can cut to whatever shape you like.

Immigrant 02-03-2013 08:11 PM

It's pretty common. I've never done it, but I've seen loads of basses with wear there.

two fingers 02-03-2013 08:13 PM

Lots of slappers get really bad wear just below the strings. Most just roll with it. When I went to Victor Wooten's bass camp years ago, I felt like I was just about the only one there WITHOUT that really bad wear spot on my bass. Some of them were worn all the way through the finish. On of Vic's older Fodera's was worn down at least a quarter inch in a big oval shape right there.

hibachiduck 02-03-2013 08:39 PM

I guess I just don't slap enough for this to be a problem, but I've seen people tear their basses up to the point that it's through the finish and actually cutting into the wood a bit. With the exception of one of my basses, they all look pretty much exactly how they did when I got them (other than the good ol' headstock chips and on my regular guitars small scratch marks on the pickguard). I do slap on 3 songs every night I perform and at least that much at rehearsal and more so in my own practice. I saw a dude with an Ibanez that looked like a board that had been sucked up by a tornado which then threw it into a hurricane. It was distressed as hell. You could visibly see where the wood was chewed up even from audience distance of it. I asked him what his bass ever did to him and he said it was just the bass he learned slap on.

Perhaps my technique is just different or that dude has no other hobby in his spare time than to play slap bass. His entire show was done finger style and he has no side projects, so...yeah. It seemed like it'd take several years of slapping 5 days a week to do what he did to that bass. I thought it looked cool, but I wouldn't ever want any of my beauties tore up like that :)

smither12 02-03-2013 09:03 PM

My old ibanez is a dark mahogany color and because of the slapping it is almost a light brown in the area that my fingernail touches. But my fender precision just gets dented and it looks like a stain or something from far away, but i guess i might just roll with it - gives it character.

Rip Topaz 02-03-2013 09:07 PM

My right thumbnail is actually pretty strong when it grows in, so I try to keep it closely trimmed. Otherwise I end up with nasty scratches near my pickup and along my E string.

I buffed out the scratches once, but decided to just let nature take its course in the future. I doubt I'll ever get past the surface of the wood, but I'm sure it'll at least make it through the paint.

I've seen some guitars that have been worn down so bad that the wood is all chewed up, just from constant contact with a guitar pick.

smither12 02-03-2013 09:09 PM

@Pogipoints
How well does that work for you? Do you just apply it on the area thats been getting knicks and it adds protection?

JimmyM 02-03-2013 10:06 PM

Oh, just let your nails dig. Looks cool. People love Willie Nelson because of that big hole in his guitar.

Fuzzbass 02-04-2013 08:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smither12 (Post 13824723)
While I'm slapping my right hand fingers come down on the side of my bass next to the string and over time it has creating dents (from my finger nails and they are not long either)on my Fender Precision american standard. Does this happen to anyone else? What can i do do stop this?

If the wear bothers you, you can replace the pickguard eventually.

If you're denting the paint, then you must have unusual slap technique. :eyebrow::)

Ooops... topo morto said this first.

smither12 02-04-2013 06:54 PM

I recently have just been looking at my bass and believe that the paint is not coming off but it is just cutting up the pick guard at a tiny bit.

MD 02-04-2013 07:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rip Topaz (Post 13825363)
My right thumbnail is actually pretty strong when it grows in, so I try to keep it closely trimmed. Otherwise I end up with nasty scratches near my pickup and along my E string.

Used to have a similar issue with my thumb. It would scratch my top when I shifted it off the FB to strike the E. I made what I can only refer to as a thumb sock; a small piece of soft cotton wrapped around my thumb and secured with electrical tape. I use it at home and when getting together with friends. On paid gigs, I put a skin toned band aid on the thumb nail.

Play Less Cool 02-04-2013 09:16 PM

when i got my first bass, the pickgaurd had a layer of plastic over it and it eventually got really chewed up at the top of the pickup from my thumb as a rest and below the G string from popping. i thought i was doing something really wrong but after i ripped the plastic off, it looked brand new again.
but now i ripped the plastic off, no (or barely) any markings are being made

topo morto 02-05-2013 04:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Play Less Cool (Post 13831065)
when i got my first bass, the pickgaurd had a layer of plastic over it and it eventually got really chewed up at the top of the pickup from my thumb as a rest and below the G string from popping. i thought i was doing something really wrong but after i ripped the plastic off, it looked brand new again.
but now i ripped the plastic off, no (or barely) any markings are being made

:)

Tupac 02-05-2013 04:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Play Less Cool (Post 13831065)
when i got my first bass, the pickgaurd had a layer of plastic over it and it eventually got really chewed up at the top of the pickup from my thumb as a rest and below the G string from popping. i thought i was doing something really wrong but after i ripped the plastic off, it looked brand new again.
but now i ripped the plastic off, no (or barely) any markings are being made

Hah, I did this too. For some reason there was two sheets on the pickguard of my Ray 4.

Rev J 02-05-2013 11:34 AM

Call me weird but I wouldn't worry about it. I think basses that are a little nicked and beaten up are really cool looking. I bought a Sunburst Steve Bailey Jazz bass because I love how Sunburst guitars and basses look as they get beaten up. Look at SRV's #1 Strat or Jaco's Bass of Doom. I already have a couple of thumb divits worn around the bridge pickup of my bass from where I rest my thumb when I'm playing (and that started in the first month). It looks hella badass.

C/S,
Rev J

pogipoints 02-07-2013 03:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smither12 (Post 13825369)
@Pogipoints
How well does that work for you? Do you just apply it on the area thats been getting knicks and it adds protection?

Yes, I just cut the mylar into a shape that would cover the affected area. And I only did this to one particular bass that seemed to have a very soft oil-finished redwood top.

All my other basses have scuffs in that area. But then all these have either poly or lacquer finishes.





Sorry for the weird lighting. Tried to light it such that the mylar and the scuffing underneath can be seen.

VanillaThundah 02-07-2013 03:46 PM

I keep my right hand nails trimmed well for that very reason. Never end up with any on mine and I play pretty hard when I slap

smither12 02-07-2013 09:05 PM

Just realized that I had a plastic wrap on the pick guard LOL! I took it off and their are no scratches!! Haha I guess its not my technique!! :)


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