Is that plastic ?
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
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herbsman
Is that plastic ?
I took off the bridge pickup cover on my 4003.. I was expecting a hefty piece of metal? what went wrong..whats it made of.. is that real chromed metal ? or.. an impersonator
of the lowest degree.... was it always that way ?
of the lowest degree.... was it always that way ?
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dano
- squirebass
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A metal handrest on a '73 4001? A non-Rick replacement part, no doubt. I believe that ever since the horseshoe p.u. was discontinued in the late sixties the handrest over the treble pickup has been made out of plastic.
A Rickenbacker bass is much like the Jaguar E car - perennially ultra-fashionable.
- squirebass
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jwr2
The pickup cover is another anachronism ... like the mute and the stereo jack ... it is a throughback to look like the old horseshoe pickup ... which was the very first electric guitar pickup designed and implemented.
This was chromed steel that was part of the magnet and magnetic field for the pickup and strings ...
This was chromed steel that was part of the magnet and magnetic field for the pickup and strings ...
- squirebass
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Actually it is entirely original according to the original owner who would have no reason to be less than truthful about it as he is a long time friend. I also had another '72 Mapleglo 4001 which I purchased new (my first RIC) and it too had a plastic cover. I thought it was metal until it was damaged and some of the plating came off, I was amazed to find it was plastic.
I have heard that '72 was something of a transition year for the 4001, maybe this is another example?
I have heard that '72 was something of a transition year for the 4001, maybe this is another example?
- squirebass
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Well, never say never, but I remember trying new models of these in the store in the '72-74 time period, and I clearly remember when they starting arriving at my music store with plastic pickup covers. I noticed it right off, becuase the plastic ones look thicker than the metal ones did, and I can usually tell which type a bass has from the picture (assuming the picture is any good). Also, if you search the archives of this site, John Hall replied to one of my posts in which he confirmed that metal was used after the horseshoe was replaced, and then the plastic came along later. Mr. Hall, would you care to elaborate?
"This is the big one, Elizabeth, I'm coming to join ya, honey!"
- squirebass
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I know what you are saying Robert! And I have tried to figure out what the cutoff was for the binding and inlays too. I have seen basses just a little older or a little younger than mine with checker binding(mine has white binding), and I even saw an early '72 (at least it had a '72 jackplate) with the narrow inlays! It just looks like they made them with what they had back then, and the process of replacing binding and inlays didn't occur on one particular deadline date. But my research continues...
"This is the big one, Elizabeth, I'm coming to join ya, honey!"
- squirebass
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