Finally Considering Flats
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Re: Finally Considering Flats
after trying out several flat sets,i found a ghs 40-100 set to work great. they are reasonably lower in tension,have a great clicky tone when played with a pick,and a smooth full bassy sound played fingerstyle. my experience with the fender and the chrome sets was: very stiff/hi tension/clangy sounding. i actually love pyamid flats,but the ghs strings sound similar,at a lot lower cost.
Re: Finally Considering Flats
Steve, with a pick, the Chromes might be more bright than you'll want. Just a caveat, having Chromes on my 4004C. Tension-wise they are what you want, as would be the Fender flats. I bought a couple sets of those when they were $13 a set at Marshall Music a couple years ago and though nice tone, I notice the open E sounds a bit phasey due to the way it vibrates.
Todd, really nice tune. That bass has an upright sound to it.
Todd, really nice tune. That bass has an upright sound to it.
-
jwr2
Re: Finally Considering Flats
Steve:
The real strength of a musicman bass is how it can really bring out the treble. It can be eq'd to sound like a passive p-bass also. But maybe you should consider getting a passive p-bass 5 string or a passive fender-bird 5 or a passive t-bird 5 stringer.
And if you detune to E flat then you need to raise your action and get fat strings.
Also if you detune a 35" scale bass could be nice.
A nice cheap 5 string bass that performs well is this one here ...
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/ ... sku=512618
I have been thinking about getting one of those basses myself.
The real strength of a musicman bass is how it can really bring out the treble. It can be eq'd to sound like a passive p-bass also. But maybe you should consider getting a passive p-bass 5 string or a passive fender-bird 5 or a passive t-bird 5 stringer.
And if you detune to E flat then you need to raise your action and get fat strings.
Also if you detune a 35" scale bass could be nice.
A nice cheap 5 string bass that performs well is this one here ...
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/ ... sku=512618
I have been thinking about getting one of those basses myself.
- Scotty_Guitar
- New member
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Wed Mar 05, 2008 8:15 pm
Re: Finally Considering Flats
LaBella Deep Talkin' Bass flats and D'addario Chromes are great! Got LaBellas on a Hofner Club, and Chromes on a Ricky, and Fender flats on a (what else) Fender (Mustang). The Chromes pulled the neck a bit on the Ricky, though. I plan on trying the lighter gage Fenders flats (9050) on it for a while. The gage is more like the originals, and though stainless should work well. I prefer nickel to stainless when possible however. Just my opinion...
My faves on the Hofner are Hofner flats (supposedly made by Pyramid). But the consistency is terrible! It took 4 sets to get one whole set working right. But nuttin better after that! And the Ricky likes to change its sound per set/brand/type of strings. The Chromes gave me a huge range of tones. Though I also liked LaBella made Carvin strings on it too... Great "stand-up" sound - MoTown all the way!
Those who say the Ricky isn't as versatile as a Fender are crazy!! I gave up a perfectly good 4003 in the 80s, and kicked myself util I replaced it recently. Wish I'd waited for the full width "shark tooth" inlay though!
Half the fun of trying different strings is discovering new sounds with your guitar/bass. Let the good times roll, man

My faves on the Hofner are Hofner flats (supposedly made by Pyramid). But the consistency is terrible! It took 4 sets to get one whole set working right. But nuttin better after that! And the Ricky likes to change its sound per set/brand/type of strings. The Chromes gave me a huge range of tones. Though I also liked LaBella made Carvin strings on it too... Great "stand-up" sound - MoTown all the way!
Those who say the Ricky isn't as versatile as a Fender are crazy!! I gave up a perfectly good 4003 in the 80s, and kicked myself util I replaced it recently. Wish I'd waited for the full width "shark tooth" inlay though!
Half the fun of trying different strings is discovering new sounds with your guitar/bass. Let the good times roll, man
“John always played like it was his last day on the planet.” Ringo Star
Re: Finally Considering Flats
I use D'Addario Chromes on my OLP/Music Man SR, and the tone is great. I have a Bartolini MM pick up in it that's voiced for low/low mid tone. That makes for some huge powerful tone. I've gone to using DR rounds on my Ricks for a little more versitility, so I can go from twangy to thumpy to major growl if I need to.
