
Back in the Saddle
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Back in the Saddle
Hey all, I posted, for the first time on the Bass topic section, last weekend. I got "my" Ric 4001, circa 80s, I believe, back from the local luthier, he dressed the frets, adjusted the neck and intonation, cleaned out the electronics, etc., installed DR strings. I recorded it, with a pick, straight though a pre-amp & compressor. WOW !! For someone who has zero bass chops, I sure am thrilled with the groovy thud that this baby provides me ! I swear, and I'll bet I'm not the first one to say this, it almost sounds like the deepest notes of a piano. Ralph, the luthier, mentioned what a pain it was to work with the bridge, he did the best he could do, he says, the E and D are still a little sharp at the 12th fret, but it looks like he moved the saddles as far as he could. Should I mess with it any more ?


"Say what you like about the tenets of national socialism, Dude, at least it's an ethos." - Walter Sobchak.
- atomic_punk
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shinynewtoy
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JetGlo is a can't-miss ! To me, you can never go wrong with JetGlo or MapleGlo, but then again, all Ric finishes are fabulous. Also like a good FireGlo and the new midnight blue.
This is off-topic, but I started it - anyway, the only thing that bothers me, somewhat, about the 4001 bass is the binding, it gives it a sharp edge, and I rest my arm there when I play, it digs into my arm. It looks like the 4004 series have no binding, a more contoured shape, as well as a more modern bridge design. I guess it's sort of the 650 of the bass line. However, it has humbucking pick-ups and only two knobs. Does this bass deliver the classic Rickenbacker bass sound ? I would imagine it would get lost in the changes.
This is off-topic, but I started it - anyway, the only thing that bothers me, somewhat, about the 4001 bass is the binding, it gives it a sharp edge, and I rest my arm there when I play, it digs into my arm. It looks like the 4004 series have no binding, a more contoured shape, as well as a more modern bridge design. I guess it's sort of the 650 of the bass line. However, it has humbucking pick-ups and only two knobs. Does this bass deliver the classic Rickenbacker bass sound ? I would imagine it would get lost in the changes.
"Say what you like about the tenets of national socialism, Dude, at least it's an ethos." - Walter Sobchak.
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shinynewtoy
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What does the S mean in 4003S? Is that something that is no longer in production ? I did not see that on the Ric web site. I like the sound of the high-gains, not sure I want an expensive re-issue, given that I don't really play bass ... yet !! I am getting better though 
"Say what you like about the tenets of national socialism, Dude, at least it's an ethos." - Walter Sobchak.
- bassduke49
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Believe it or not, the S stood for "special" in that it was not the ordinary 4001 with the binding and shark-fin position markers. I believe the original S series was aimed at export orders, primarily from Rose Morris in England who put their own model number on it (the 1999 -- nothing to do with the year) back in the 1960s. The V63 and to some degree, the C64, were designed to emulate the 4001S.
Author: "The Rickenbacker Electric Bass - 50 Years As Rock's Bottom"





