Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
-
Gilmourisgod
- Member
- Posts: 327
- Joined: Wed Feb 12, 2014 9:26 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Very cool to see a restoration nearly realtime! Did you have to remove the fingerboard binding at the heel end of the neck, or did this bass not have any?
- Kopfjaeger
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 1908
- Joined: Fri Jun 24, 2011 8:49 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
As far as I know, it did not have any there. None of my basses have binding there, come to think of it.
Sepp
Sepp
Vintage/Classic Rickenbacker Enthusiast!
1972 4001 Jetglo
1973 4001 Burgundyglo
2011 4003 Jetglo
1986 4003 Shadow
1972 4001 Jetglo
1973 4001 Burgundyglo
2011 4003 Jetglo
1986 4003 Shadow
-
Gilmourisgod
- Member
- Posts: 327
- Joined: Wed Feb 12, 2014 9:26 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Sepp,
I mean at the bridge end of the fingerboard, wrong terminology. I think all the basses with bound fingerboards have it on three edges, don't they?
I mean at the bridge end of the fingerboard, wrong terminology. I think all the basses with bound fingerboards have it on three edges, don't they?
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
AFAIK, the binding at the heel-end of the fretboard was added in the early 1970s, perhaps around 1971/1972?Gilmourisgod wrote:Sepp,
I mean at the bridge end of the fingerboard, wrong terminology. I think all the basses with bound fingerboards have it on three edges, don't they?
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
If that's so, then it wasn't consistently applied - I have 5 Ricks that were made from the mid 70's to the mid 80's. The only one of those that has binding on the butt end of the neck/fingerboard is the top of the range 4002.
Ash
Ash
1976 4001 "Shadow" Fretless
1978 4002 Walnut
1986 4008 Silver
1999 4001 V63 White
2012 4004 Jetglo
_____________________
Button 6 String Fretfull
Button 6 String Fretless
NS CR5 Omni Bass Fretless
Ashbory Bass
1978 4002 Walnut
1986 4008 Silver
1999 4001 V63 White
2012 4004 Jetglo
_____________________
Button 6 String Fretfull
Button 6 String Fretless
NS CR5 Omni Bass Fretless
Ashbory Bass
-
Gilmourisgod
- Member
- Posts: 327
- Joined: Wed Feb 12, 2014 9:26 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
My 79' Jetglo had it on the end of the fingerboard, I remember because it separated at the miter joint and I tried to glue it back with model airplane glue!(young and stupid)
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Ashgray wrote:If that's so, then it wasn't consistently applied - I have 5 Ricks that were made from the mid 70's to the mid 80's. The only one of those that has binding on the butt end of the neck/fingerboard is the top of the range 4002.
Ash
Not sure - but I have seen many 4001s from the early 70s and up that have binding at the heel-end of the fretboard.
Also, many 4005 models and the 4005LS had the binding as well.
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Both of my current/former '73 4001s have it.
- bassduke49
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6580
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2003 5:00 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Two 21-fretters! Yummm!
Author: "The Rickenbacker Electric Bass - 50 Years As Rock's Bottom"
- Kopfjaeger
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 1908
- Joined: Fri Jun 24, 2011 8:49 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Not much progress here lately. Still waiting for my Pickguard from tony as well as my Horsie assembly. Something about California law selling used gear has to wait out a 30 day period in case it's reported stolen?
I pulled out the truss rods, cut the mangled end back, re-beveled, both and tapered the threaded ends a bit. Turned out real well! i think I took .25 of an inch off of the one. No big deal. Someone threaded the one quite a ways down the rod. Did they really think they were going to have to adjust it that much?
I cut strips of electrical tape and lined both sides where the rods touch. The were quite snug coming out so I did not think the extra tape would have worked very well. Instead of using a clamp at the first fret, I used 2 feet of surgical tubing to tightly bind the fretboard and neck. It's an old gunsmith trick to fix a cracked stock. It puts pressure on the entire area, evenly, and works really well on odd shape areas, like the neck!
Sepp
I pulled out the truss rods, cut the mangled end back, re-beveled, both and tapered the threaded ends a bit. Turned out real well! i think I took .25 of an inch off of the one. No big deal. Someone threaded the one quite a ways down the rod. Did they really think they were going to have to adjust it that much?
I cut strips of electrical tape and lined both sides where the rods touch. The were quite snug coming out so I did not think the extra tape would have worked very well. Instead of using a clamp at the first fret, I used 2 feet of surgical tubing to tightly bind the fretboard and neck. It's an old gunsmith trick to fix a cracked stock. It puts pressure on the entire area, evenly, and works really well on odd shape areas, like the neck!
Sepp
Vintage/Classic Rickenbacker Enthusiast!
1972 4001 Jetglo
1973 4001 Burgundyglo
2011 4003 Jetglo
1986 4003 Shadow
1972 4001 Jetglo
1973 4001 Burgundyglo
2011 4003 Jetglo
1986 4003 Shadow
-
Gilmourisgod
- Member
- Posts: 327
- Joined: Wed Feb 12, 2014 9:26 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
It's interesting to see so much difference between basses made one month apart! Notice the difference in bridge placement, the fireglo on the right has the bridge noticeably farther towards the neck than the current production basses, the body actually looks longer, or is that just the photo? The upper horn on the fireglo looks longer in the photo. Was there a difference in scale length on these two basses? If the bridge placement changed, the fingerboard would have to move with it unless the whole body got longer. I guess that speaks to the "hand-made" quality of the older basses pre-CNC machining.
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Drool...Kopfjaeger wrote:The short pole toaster measuring 8.25k
Sepp
- bassduke49
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6580
- Joined: Wed May 14, 2003 5:00 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Certainly subtle differences in shape, but a lot of that had to do with the handmade construction back then. The bridge placement is much different on these because they are 21-fretters; most 4001 and 4003 basses are only 20-fretters. They made the neck a bit longer (about 1/2") so to keep the scale the same, the tailpiece/bridge was moved "up" the body to compensate.Gilmourisgod wrote:It's interesting to see so much difference between basses made one month apart! Notice the difference in bridge placement, the fireglo on the right has the bridge noticeably farther towards the neck than the current production basses, the body actually looks longer, or is that just the photo?
Author: "The Rickenbacker Electric Bass - 50 Years As Rock's Bottom"
- chefothefuture
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 1886
- Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2005 6:00 am
Re: Reserection! 1968 4001 Burgundyglo
Early '71.collin wrote:AFAIK, the binding at the heel-end of the fretboard was added in the early 1970s, perhaps around 1971/1972?Gilmourisgod wrote:Sepp,
I mean at the bridge end of the fingerboard, wrong terminology. I think all the basses with bound fingerboards have it on three edges, don't they?

