![]() |
what would you recomend for me? well, i want to buy a new bass and i love warwick, i was almost sure that i find the one but sudenly a friend of mine apears with a used warwick. well, the warwick that i found is : warwick rockbass corvette 4 strings: ![]() and at the same price my friend appear with this warwick: ![]() is a warwick 98 modded with seymour duncan active mics i have this video of that ww too: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...&v=hbEIMAo2NYM what do you think would be a better investment? |
if its a true Warwick made in germany it will always be better than a rockbass and imo the late 90's wicks are mean! |
The 98 Warwick corvette. The rockbasses were not built as well as the older corvettes. |
Quote:
|
Zee Germans! |
Quote:
To the OP, I have a late 90s Corvette with active Seymour Duncan pickups/preamp (so essentially, I have that bass you're looking at). Get it. The tonal options and the build quality/reliability of the German made one is worth the extra for investment. |
hey thanks! just for the record, how much difference of u$ are beetween a new warwick and a new rockbass warwick. |
Quote:
|
thanks to you i decided the german warwick bass, its has his marks and a little damage in the top i give you more photos. its possible to Restore this bass damage (refill the top damage, and restore the fingerboard)?, or restored it can affect the performance?. ![]() ![]() here you can notice the damage from slapping: ![]() ![]() and this is the most damaged part: ![]() its possible to restore it and make it look new with a luthier? thanks for all! |
if its just the end of the fretboard leave it, it will end up like that again, and imo thats not that bad looking. my thumb has grooves at end of fretboard and on both p/u from my strings, i play a lil rough. the wear and tear is what makes older basses better imo once again, breaks them in and adds character that ding is on the back anyway. |
Quote:
i know that old basses look cooler haha the marks it has are only from slapping it haha, my question was about if in any day i want to restore it, it would lose something of the bass performance? thanks for all!! |
i dont think it would lose anything performance wise, but then again im not a luthier nor do i have the exprience of playing on a restored bass. |
Quote:
thanks in advance! |
get the serial # and shoot warwick an email or msg them on here, they should be able to give you all the specs you need for the bass. i thought vettes from these years were bubinga but then again my thumb isnt the normal wood used so anything is possible. |
You can email Warwick and they can give you all of the details. With it being a 98 you will need the vin number as well as some photos from the back cover pulled off. You can find the link here with all the information that you will need to provide them. http://www.warwick.de/modules/suppor...ID=22701&cl=EN |
german for sure is that a wenge neck or bubinga? those are some old seymours in there; i remember seeing those ads for them in the bass mags years ago. |
Quote:
my friend told me that is from ash and bubinga, but i thought that they were all of ash or all of bubinga. |
from pics its hard to tell, but maybe bubinga top on ash body with wenge neck? at the same time other pics make the whole body look ash... |
i had a custom shop 2006 5 string ash corvette, ash is super soft wood and would explain excessive damage to the body from slapping and popping. as stated my thumb has the wear in about the same spots and just as much if not more and its bubinga. |
Ash body, wenge neck and fingerboard, old school switchable Duncan pickups I'm assuming with Duncan preamp. The body looks as if there is a thin matt finish on it but amazing things can be done to bring it back to life. The ding in the horn can be remedied to get it back 95% without any use of “fill” need a wet washcloth and a soldering iron and someone who has done it before. It’s a matter of wet heating the wood so the fibers pull in the moisture and swell almost to the exact shape it was before. Dip furniture grade high end steel wool in true oil and go over it lightly. Been in that movie. |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:45 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.12
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.