It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Vintage, Modern, V & C series, Fretless, Signature & Special Editions

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teeder
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by teeder »

You got it all wrong. He modded a V63! Poor thing. :twisted:
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ajish4
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by ajish4 »

Andy,

You were destined to have that bass.

You are the keeper of the flame, and there isn't a better custodian I know of to watch over that bass.

Here's to another 30!
rickaddict
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by rickaddict »

teeder wrote:You got it all wrong. He modded a V63! Poor thing. :twisted:
Oh.

Well then I'd put it back to Jetglo!

8)
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rickenbrother
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by rickenbrother »

I just realized that this coming July will be 30 years of Rickenbacker playing for me as well! I just wish I did the same as Andy and kept my first one.
JETGLO should officially be renamed JETGLO ROCKS! :-)
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wints
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by wints »

Thanks for all the comments guys...Very entertaining as ever! Loved that Rose-Maurice one Tony! :lol:

I posted here in June 2001, on a thread about refinishing a 4001. John Simmons directed me to an earlier thread about the Beatles/Bee Gees equipment, where Pete Greenwood had posted he used to own DH163, and, that it came from a named band. We all took it from there... :D

Over the years, gathering info and photo's has led me to believe this is certainly the bass used on the Bee Gees recordings from 1966 until 1970, where after a performance at the RAH it was no longer used. I'd love to know where it was from '70 until '78 when Pete bought it, but that may be another day.

As Pete posted years ago, it was the best Ric bass he had played up until then. I'd say that's still valid for me today. The neck has stayed perfectly straight, even when I used Roto's back in the early days, and the action is beautifully low. The horsie needs a charge, but that's on the to do list. I still have the original thumb rest, but removed it many years ago, because one of the securing screws sits in the rout for the toaster pick up and I didn't want to damage the lead!

Over a 40 year period, it seems it has always puts a smile on one's face... :D
Image
Image

Or, a silly grin! 8)
Image
Last edited by wints on Thu Jan 27, 2011 6:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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T.A.R.
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by T.A.R. »

That is so Cool! Great story!
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ajish4
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by ajish4 »

LOL!

Thanks Andy.....OH NO, that dopey *** grin again! I guess that what Fulfillment looks like! :lol:

That bass gave me goosebumps.
dricard
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by dricard »

bassduke49 wrote:I hope you don't mind, Wints, but for the newbies around here, you really should tell the complete story of this bass. There are probably several folks wondering what causes your enthusiasm. :D


mmmmm, the Holy Grail...I remember most of the story
dricard
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by dricard »

soon, I will be with OJ7200 for 20 years.....in the registry. Unfortunately, I don't know where it was the first 19 years of its life
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johnallg
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by johnallg »

Great pictures and always good to read about that bass's history. That neck HAS to be slim as you only see the fretboard in the photos, meaning the more side-on ones.

Charge those shoes up on a huge woofer's magnet structure and let it roar. :lol:
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antipodean
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by antipodean »

Magic story....super bass!! :D
"I don't want to sound incredulous but I can't believe it" Rex Mossop
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bartyclue
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by bartyclue »

The horsie needs a charge

Ok please forgive me if this is a stupid question but do pups occasionaly need a "recharge"? If so how do you do that?
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johnallg
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by johnallg »

bartyclue wrote: The horsie needs a charge

Ok please forgive me if this is a stupid question but do pups occasionaly need a "recharge"? If so how do you do that?
Brian, unlike your CS where the poles in the coil are permanent magnets and the shoes are just steel dress, these old horsey pickups had no permanent magnets but the shoes were magnetized and they would, over time, lose magnetism, and need a recharge.
nukebass
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by nukebass »

Just pass a low current through it. That should work! :mrgreen:
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wints
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Re: It Was 30 Years Ago Today...

Post by wints »

ajish4 wrote:LOL!

Thanks Andy.....OH NO, that dopey *** grin again! I guess that what Fulfillment looks like! :lol:

That bass gave me goosebumps.
I need to bring it over sometime Tony! Thanks again guys... :D
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