For the serious collector
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
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ken_swearingen
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 2298
- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2004 6:00 pm
I bet at the time RIC wished they could have made it look like the 12-string compact headstock, but it wouldn't have worked due to string thicknesses and tensions. The Spudstock(r) seems as if it was designed for the constraints of the tuning pegs used, and for minimal weight. An anomoly of RIC design, IMO... elegance is conspiciously absent...it has the vibe of a prototype ...where's Roger Rossmeisel when ya need him, eh?
...or a longer 4001 style headstock if the 12 string compact headstock idea wouldn't hold?
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rickaddict
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6163
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2004 7:46 am
The enlongated cresting wave headstock must make those basses quite neck heavy, I'd imagine. I think it's clever the Spudstock uses guitar tuners for the octave strings....why use a bigger and heavier bass tuner if you don't have to? The 12-string style headstock requires the two long routs on each side of the headstock-- i'd imagine that'd make a bass weak in sustain, and too fragile. I think the ideal headstock would be a slightly enlonged cresting wave headstock, with heavy-duty banjo style tuners handling the octave strings. This design would look like a regular bass from the front, and the octave tuners would be accessed from the back of the headstock, giving the advantage of knowing exactly what string you are tuning.
