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Old 04-07-2010, 10:52 PM
Allan Padmore Allan Padmore is offline
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Better late than never LOL. My bsr5gn has maple core with walnut top and back, maple and bubinga neck I think with morado fret board. Best bass I have ever owned.
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Old 07-18-2012, 04:19 AM
Robert Bruins Robert Bruins is offline
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Hi, I've changed my dip settings to,.. now set the low to highest, midrange to lowest(normal) and did not change the high. I'm going to try this for a while and see what happens. I think the low is now more efficient...
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Old 07-19-2012, 08:19 PM
Allan Padmore Allan Padmore is offline
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Enjoy. Since that time I've never touched my bass dip-switch settings from the change I made. Love the sound! I think Ken's 18 volt pre is head and shoulders above his previous and the 9 volt was good. The 18 volt just gives the bass a bigger, wider sound. Throw in the series/parallel switches and you can tweak for days lol.
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Old 07-19-2012, 09:04 PM
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Tim Bishop Tim Bishop is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Allan Padmore View Post
....I think Ken's 18 volt pre is head and shoulders above his previous and the 9 volt was good....
Really? I think the comparison is not relevant to tone: You're only getting longer battery life with the 18V vs. 9V. For me, I'm equally happy with either pre-amp. The only difference is having the option with the 18V to adjust switches to taste. Even with that option, I've never really found a need to adjust switches from factory settings as those settings sound optimal to my ear. For my tonal tastes, the wood choices are more relevant.
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Old 07-20-2012, 08:56 AM
Allan Padmore Allan Padmore is offline
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Ok no prob. I just know with my old CRV I replaced the pre but with my bsr5gn I have no need to. I have all the tone and warmth I want with more to spare. Plus the series/parallel switches to play with and I'm happy. There is a post by Ken where he explains that the shelving frequencies are wider or something to that effect. Different frequency points and width sounds like it leads to different tones. Maybe it is the different woods I don't know. The option to adjust dip switches that tweak the bass, mids and treble to taste is impressive and produces results for me. There are obviously tons of professional players more than happy with the 9 volt pre. Maybe I'm just weird lol.
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