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  #1  
Old 01-20-2012, 06:47 PM
Chris DeMarco Chris DeMarco is offline
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Cool, thanks for the info. I'll update with any markings I find once the bass is in my posession.
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Old 02-26-2012, 12:00 PM
Chris DeMarco Chris DeMarco is offline
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Default Well... I got the bass...

Well, the verdict is in...

I picked up the "bass" yesterday and to my suprise it is pretty small. It's actually smaller then most cello's I've seen but It's pretty cool so I'm not complaining.

I took some pictures...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/5808953...57629458891181

When I got the bass it wa sbeing held together by a rubber band, which you can see in those pictures but when the rubber band snapped the bass top fell into two pieces and came off. The scroll is really cool, it's a three piece scroll that is very interresting on one side bt non existent on the other. The fretboard has what I thought were tape marks but what are actually grooves in it. Like there were frets? There was also an interresting patch on the upper end of the front which looks OK from the front but is terrible from the back.

Here are the dimensions:
Upper Bout: 9"
Lower Bout: 11.5"
Mid: 7"
Body Length: 22"
Rib Depth: 3"
String Length (guesstimate): 20"

(As you can see quite a bit smaller then what the seller origonally gave me)

Origonally I was planning on hanging it on a wall but now that I have it, I'm thinking about trying some repairs on it over the summer. I don't intend on getting it in working order but maybe atleast in one piece! I was also thinking with the discovery of the "fret grooves" and size which is actually smaller than a cello maybe it's not a church bass at all, maybe it's a old cello or viol da gamba? Just a thought.
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Old 02-26-2012, 04:26 PM
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Ken Smith Ken Smith is offline
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Lightbulb little bass?

Sounds more like a little or 3/4-1/2 sized cello. A bass of anykind in the modern sense would never be that small. But, in the old days, Cellos were also called basses and OUR basses were called Double Basses formally to make the distinction. In that sense, it is a bass of sort but NOT a small DOUBLE Bass. You have a baby Cello, not a Baby Double Bass.. I think!
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Old 02-26-2012, 05:29 PM
Chris DeMarco Chris DeMarco is offline
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Default Baby Cello...

A baby cello with frets?
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  #5  
Old 02-26-2012, 05:39 PM
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Ken Smith Ken Smith is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris DeMarco View Post
A baby cello with frets?
Possibly so or small Church bass which was a basically and American Cello. My JB Allen originally had 3 frets inlaid in the first few positions, inlaid maple lines so show the NON-trained amateur player what notes to play with the singers. With the original neck and FB in hand, I can tell by the varnish wear on the neck that only a few notes were played over and over again. No Simandl training back then, just fistacuffs technique.
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Old 02-26-2012, 08:39 PM
Chris DeMarco Chris DeMarco is offline
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Default Repairs...

If I decide to practice some repairs on it, where should I start? I'm thinking either the front or scroll. The front is split in two, the smaller half has a bad F hole crack that is several inches long and the larger half has several smaller cracks towards the bottom. If I start with the front, should I do small cracks first then put the two pieces back together or should it be in all one piece first? Good place to get spare wood for the inside patching? When I get around to the corners, I'll want to know what type of wood the top is made of, any ideas? My guess is pine? As far as the rest of the body, I'll need some veneer for those sides, not sure what that's made of either.

Since it's just a fun project should I just use wood glue or will that just make more of a problem for myself?
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Old 02-26-2012, 11:26 PM
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Ken Smith Ken Smith is offline
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Exclamation ahh..

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris DeMarco View Post
If I decide to practice some repairs on it, where should I start? I'm thinking either the front or scroll. The front is split in two, the smaller half has a bad F hole crack that is several inches long and the larger half has several smaller cracks towards the bottom. If I start with the front, should I do small cracks first then put the two pieces back together or should it be in all one piece first? Good place to get spare wood for the inside patching? When I get around to the corners, I'll want to know what type of wood the top is made of, any ideas? My guess is pine? As far as the rest of the body, I'll need some veneer for those sides, not sure what that's made of either.

Since it's just a fun project should I just use wood glue or will that just make more of a problem for myself?
I think this is a huge project and asking online rather than training in a shop by a real Luthier is not the way to go. You need to know the basics and your questions tell me you have very little understaning of how these are made, repaired and with what materials. Imagine your car is damaged in an accident or even a human. Asking questions like this is a sure way something or someone will not make it. Get some training or at least a bit of education on the subject. The more you learn, the more you will realize what you are asking above.
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Old 02-27-2012, 10:42 AM
Scott Pope Scott Pope is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken Smith View Post
fistacuffs
There's a word I haven't seen in awhile. And, of course, everything comes full circle. Church bands, then organ, then orchestra (with or without organ), then electronic keyboard instruments due to the high cost of purchase and maintenance of a traditional pipe organ, now with some "contemporary" services, back to a church band, now electrified. But from what I've seen, the same comment about technique still applies.
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