Hmm... I'll have to build a FrankenJazz and check that out.
Why did they do away with this design again?
Why did they do away with this design again?
I found something interesting, in a book my bro-in-law gave me.In all my research, I didn't find anything about that (would be interesting to find out). You could make the assumption that the v-v-t that replaced it was cheaper to manufacture or that it was just easier for musicians to use right away.
note: Fender Sales was the distribution division at the time; the manufacturing division was Fender Electric Instrument Co.However, a 1959 photo of an early Jazz Bass shows a 3-control setup as found on post-1961 models. Evidently, the design predates the stacked-knob design. In any event, Leo settled on stacked knobs for the first production models, and Fender Sales ordered them on March 3, 1960. Subsequently, Leo returned to the 3-control design, thus proving that tinkerers are never satisfied.
Does the neck PU really need a tone control? It's fairly warm to begin with. For most players, a tone pot for the bridge PU probably suffices.