Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

synzzzer

New member
So I was given this (80's?) Cort Bass by a friend. When I received it, it only had the body, neck, and tuners on it. Nothing else. He originally told me he wanted me to fix it up for him, but after I told him what it would cost (including parts and friend discount) he just gave it to me.

So I polished this turd, and the lesson I learned from all this was, There are no such things as universal parts. I mean, I already knew this, but man, I had to do so much alteration and adjustments.

But onto the pictures!

The frets just came out. I mean, I've never had frets just pop out like they did. So new jumbo frets went in.












Since this was a piece of crap P-Bass, I decided I wanted a P/J Bass. So I cut out a hole for one.













I want to take a minute and say that the pickups I ordered from TNT Guitars are AWESOME!!!! They are active pickups and are copies of EMG pickups. They are crazy loud! And for the price, I think they are so well made they could bump up the price.

The only thing I would suggest is to make the tone pot 100K ohms. It doesn't really have much range at 25K. Other than that, I'd say don't be afraid to order them.

I also ordered a pickguard from them. I had to do a little creative adjusting, but it ended up working out just fine for me.









The bridge had already been replaced once, so I had to order another one. The old one was pretty rusted up, and missing pieces.





I also had to do a bit of creative screwing. (ha, ha.) No really, the hole didn't line up with the body, so I had to put a giant screw in sideways. It ended up holding. It doesn't look as bad as it does in the pictures. I have the picture taken really close up.







So, after a ton of adjusting and such, here's the final product.









There are a lot of steps I performed that I didn't mention here. I did a ton of work on this. It seemed like every little part fought me on this one. But as I said, there are no such things as universal parts.

It was also a good bass to work on, in that, it was such a piece of crap. I literally couldn't make it any worse. Oh, I did forget to mention I moved the output jack so that I could drill a hole to the bridge pickup? And speaking of crap, did you see the "wood" this thing is made of? It really is plywood. Look at the hole I made for the pickup. You can see the layers of plywood. I think it almost speaks to my level of competence that I was able to make this thing playable. Even with a wonky truss rod.

I told myself not to bother working on it, but I just can't leave a project alone. I'm glad I did, because that same friend said he would help me with a gig playing bass, but didn't have a bass...... or a bass amp. So I was glad to let him borrow the same bass he gave me (as well as a bass amp.) Is that .... Karma? I don't know.
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

Like most manufacturers, Cort is legally obliged to refrain from copying its sources of inspiration too accurately. Tweaking headstock and pickguard outlines are two immediately obvious areas.

Yes, I don't knock em' for that. I just look at it like trying to put an aftermarket pickguard on a Strat. Whether it's Squier/MIM/American, and depending upon the year (and maybe the full moon?) I understand that it's just not going to be exact. I'm actually glad I got it as close as I did. I honestly thought it would be much worse. (Insert smiley face here.)
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

In defense of Cort, I had an Artisan 5 string bass in the late 90's that I used for all of my recording work and it was beautiful.

I only played it live when I needed that 5th string though - it was of a hip shattering weight.
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

In defense of Cort, I had an Artisan 5 string bass in the late 90's that I used for all of my recording work and it was beautiful.

I only played it live when I needed that 5th string though - it was of a hip shattering weight.

Due to the (ply)wood the body is made of, this bass is pretty darn heavy. I know I am ragging on it a bit, but I'm just glad I was able to get it back to playing shape. I know it was abused before I got ahold of it. I'm also glad I was able to test out the TNT pickups. I am really digging them.
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

Just like any manufacturer, Cort had its fair share of early clunkers. Congratulations on making it playable and sounding good.

The weight should not present much of a problem for a home recording and/or song writing instrument.

Thanks for the compliment. I'm still doing a bit of tweaking (once I'm over this uncommon cold.)

I'm not too worried about the weight as that's my bass player's problem (enter laugh track here.)
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

That looks pretty good man!
I've just done a rebuild on a 1988 Aria Pro II that I picked up with crap electronics for $150. Now it plays really well. I took out the active electronics (even though now I want to put them back in!) and wired it up passively.
Looks and sounds 100% better than when I got it.

Before:
$_20.JPG

After:
bass clean.jpg

It took the best part of 2 or 3 hours to remove the decals, which were actually pictures cut out of magazines and glued to the body! :nono:

I also had to replace one of the tuners, as the shaft was bent and nearly broken off, and some bridge saddle adjustment screws which were missing.

Now it isn't a bad bass. I know it's not a brilliant bass, but it's my first and I'm still learning, so I'm happy with it.
 
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Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

Great work, both of you.
There are a lot of musicians who started playing on a Cort, Aria, or Memphis, Hondo, etc, etc. These instruments often hold a special place in our memory, being the ones we may have started out playing our first riffs on.
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

Great work, both of you.
There are a lot of musicians who started playing on a Cort, Aria, or Memphis, Hondo, etc, etc. These instruments often hold a special place in our memory, being the ones we may have started out playing our first riffs on.

Thanks a bunch. I actually liked working on this one since I wasn't worried about hurting it. This was my first time adding a jazz route for a jazz pickup. I'm glad it turned out so well. I just wish the bass weren't so dang heavy. Even though the body is plywood, it is still a very heavy plywood. Thanks again.
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

I second that, thanks!
I mainly bought this as I was a teen in the 80s, and I just love that decade. Seeing 80s retro stuff reminds me of happy times...
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

Oh by the way, Synzzzer...
Sorry! Didn't mean to hijack your thread! :guilty:
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

Good job to both of you! No disrespect to synzzer, (You're a braver man than I replacing frets) but that Aria looks awesome. Of course, I have a "Thing" for pointy basses....
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

nice job ,,i have my own bunch of lower end stuff i call my firewood collection lol
 
Re: Polishing a tu...... Cort Bass

That turned out really nice! All of my guitars are like this, $99 cheap-0's that I reworked to play/sound better (or as my wife put it, "spend $200 worth of parts on a $50 instrument, that's worth $40 when you're done :lol: )
Or the way I like to look at it, "You can't polish a turd, but you CAN roll it in glitter!"



THIS is how I dealt with pickguard screws just going into air, which might be too late for you on this build...
And I have a plywood Squier Strat that sounds great, I've heard years of "anti-plywood propaganda" so I always thought that ply=bad, but that thing is light, plays great and if I didn't tell anyone, nobody'd know it was ply, so...

Again, nice save, the bass turned out great!
 
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