...and as we can also see in your pic, they had introduced the two piece neck alreadyiamthebassman wrote:They DID fix it, in the early 80s.
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It seems at RIC they have some rather random product development stategy



Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
...and as we can also see in your pic, they had introduced the two piece neck alreadyiamthebassman wrote:They DID fix it, in the early 80s.
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Baker69 wrote:I have seen some very reasonably priced after-market complete Tail-Piece assemblies for less than £ 50.00, has anyone fitted one of these and are they actually stronger than the genuine Ric one's? They appear to be a casting but I don't know what material they use, the one I looked at was quite heavy?
The only difference I could tell between these and the originals was that the string saddles were in a matching chrome finish as opposed to the gunmetal or zinc coloured saddles fitted on the real one's. I presume they are an exact size though so the bridge assemby could be swapped over.
A friend has used a few with no issues. There are some cosmetic differences though.Baker69 wrote:heinpete wrote:...those chrome saddles come with the Allparts copy bridge.
Possibly, the one I saw was un-packaged and un-branded.
Anybody tried one???
...the clou of the whole story lies in the last sentence!johnhall wrote:Everyone has "simple", "easy" solutions, not one of which we haven't already thought of or tried already.
Unfortunately, no one yet has addressed *ALL* of the issues associated with this part, ranging from purely mechanical to those of consumer acceptance, the marketplace, the economics, and basic logistics.
There simply does not exist a "one-size-fits-all" solution and if we move ahead with any one of the various possible changes we see, someone is going to be unhappy.
Then there's this: there are tens of thousands of these basses out there with the stock tailpiece that no one seems to have any problem with, along with an order book for them in the range of 18 months delivery. That doesn't mean we don't want to improve the product but it does make you wonder what the extent of the problem really is.
I've never personally seen a modern version of the 5-screw zinc tailpiece that had any lift to it at all and I've been up close and personal with lots of new Rics in the past couple of years. So I do have to think the problem is probably overblown for that version of the tailpiece.johnhall wrote:Then there's this: there are tens of thousands of these basses out there with the stock tailpiece that no one seems to have any problem with, along with an order book for them in the range of 18 months delivery. That doesn't mean we don't want to improve the product but it does make you wonder what the extent of the problem really is.
A lot of people don't have a problem OR they just don't care or realize they have some kind of problem. Majority of musicians I know, and there's quite many of them, don't care about intonation or know how to adjust it, don't care about string height etc. It's just bad instrument if it's hard to play because set up is not correct out of the box. This kind of people hardly care about some tail lift. Like some people don't make any difference between a small transistor radio and high end stereo system as long as some sound is coming out of the device.johnhall wrote:Then there's this: there are tens of thousands of these basses out there with the stock tailpiece that no one seems to have any problem with, along with an order book for them in the range of 18 months delivery. That doesn't mean we don't want to improve the product but it does make you wonder what the extent of the problem really is.