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Old 02-17-2010, 03:46 AM
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Ken Smith Ken Smith is offline
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Cool solid?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ron Wouters View Post
Would 1920ties be correct?
Difficult to see on the pictures, but is it a solid or a plywood? I don't know when they started making plywood basses. I have a King Mortone from '40, and that is already ply...

Ron
It appears to be solid BUT ask the seller. They should know. I think 1920 is too early for production plywood basses. Earlier handmade 2 and 3 ply parts have been seen but not common. Ask also if the finish/varnish is all original. Looks a bit too shiny. The Scroll looks original all over. The 1920s seem close. The Gears are from around then but were used earlier and later. They used what they had. Also, ask if the bass was 'born' blockless. If so, make sure it has a neck block now. Blocking it will be more than the price of the bass. I have seen shops restore blockless basses and leave them blockless. This is bad. The shop/luthier doesn't take the bass on gigs and test it of have to live with it. I have one in repair now but did use it on some gigs. I was constantly tuning the bass as the neck was made attached inside to the Top and Back. As the bass vibrates from playing, it goes out of tune. The neck was almost floating while the bass vibrated. Not optimum in my opinion.

So, is it carved, refinished or blockless? These are your 3 concerns. The maker, date and exact origin are of less importance in this price range. Structure and condition as well as sound are the most important factors.
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