4001C64 Bridge/Pyramid Strings Situation
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
4001C64 Bridge/Pyramid Strings Situation
This comment is addressed to C64 owners and also for John Hall to comment on if possible. I own the 2nd C64 sold by North Coast and have had an issue to discuss. When it first arrived (2yrs ago now), the factory strings produced buzz on the A and E in several locations. After letting it set for a couple ofweeks and tweaking the neck very carefully, I gave up and bought Pyramids for it, which turned out to be THE PERFECT STRING. No buzz anywhere on the neck, perfect action eceptionally close, and perfect intonation. During the past winter the butt end of the bridge started rising off the body much as the older 4001's used to do. Nothing changed on the bass except the lifting off, which really bothered me. After calling the service dept @ Rickenbacker, the worker addressed this issue with John Hall and after a few days I called back and was told by the same person that John thought the Pyramids had too much tension for the C64 design. I have now changed to another flatwound and would never change back to rounds. Will this problem always exist, and WHY can't Pyramids be used successfully when ALL 4001's from that era were stocked with flats. I would really like to be able to put a new set back on, as I stated, they are perfect for the C64,and after playing Ricks for over 35 years, I feel that I'm qualified to state this. IMPUT?
Rick bass fanatic. I own and play several professionally. I have a passion for the S models.
High tension strings of any type can cause the tailpiece to bow- it's just a fact of life. It doesn't seem to hurt a thing and given the fact that all the originals did so as well and that this model is marketed as a replica, there's no plan to change it.
FYI: their marketing notwithstanding, the Pyramid string is NOT the same as the Maxima string we used in the 60's and has significantly greater tension.
FYI: their marketing notwithstanding, the Pyramid string is NOT the same as the Maxima string we used in the 60's and has significantly greater tension.
-
scottpro1969
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 687
- Joined: Thu Nov 06, 2003 9:19 am
No lasting effect to my knowledge. I've seen a few RIC's like that thru the years, and it dosen't seem to effect them at all. If there had ever been a problem with that, JH would have made adjustments long ago I know.
I recently went back to playing a Rickenbacker bass. Its like meeting an old friend again
I have them on both 96 and a 2000 4003's, the 96 is lifting a little but when I bought it came with med. gauge fender flats which are much higher tension than the pyramids and I'm not sure if it was like that when I got it or has happened since (I suspect it came that way). I won't change to another type because they sound and feel so good, they have the perfect sound for rics to me. If it does lift too high which I doubt I'll drill two holes like the early 4003's had and screw it down. I like the tension on them also, I like a tight playing bass, the sound is more articulate and it's much easier to finger pick, doesn't bottom out easily etc. many advantages with higher tension for finger style players.
Labella flatwounds seem to work well for me. I've had a set on an 02 4003VP for several years now and the tailpaced hasn't bowed yet.
My advice is never to use Fender flatwounds on a Rick if you don't want any tailpiece bow. I had a set on my 4001C64 and the tailpiece has severe bow. They did sound really good but they just put way too much tension on the bass.
My advice is never to use Fender flatwounds on a Rick if you don't want any tailpiece bow. I had a set on my 4001C64 and the tailpiece has severe bow. They did sound really good but they just put way too much tension on the bass.
-
johnashfield
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 723
- Joined: Thu Mar 14, 2002 8:57 pm
- Contact:
- iamthebassman
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 2415
- Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 5:00 am
- Contact:
-
johnashfield
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 723
- Joined: Thu Mar 14, 2002 8:57 pm
- Contact:
Well, I've never really had an issue with the tailpiece lifting on any of my ric basses, and I am glad they stopped putting the extra screws in them!
It's just one more little detail that mars the beauty of the Rick 4000 series bass. I am just a stickler for details like that. Most people don't care, and that's cool too.
It's just one more little detail that mars the beauty of the Rick 4000 series bass. I am just a stickler for details like that. Most people don't care, and that's cool too.
- jingle_jangle
- RRF Moderator
- Posts: 22679
- Joined: Wed Dec 22, 2004 6:00 am
- Contact:
-
johnashfield
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 723
- Joined: Thu Mar 14, 2002 8:57 pm
- Contact:

