astrozombie
KatyPerryologist
I've never had a reference as far as relief and action.
What's low and comfortable for most bassists?
What's low and comfortable for most bassists?
I'm referring to a lower setup than usual. Fender for instance gives you all those measurements but they're a little high off the fretboard in reality.
I solved the problem already anyway.
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One of the main problems I have found on this forum with my little experience here is that people would rather break down what you're asking and convince you it was not worth asking than actually help you like they should. Glad you were able to fix it.
That said, I never understood why anyone has ever considered setting up an instrument to anyone's ideal other than their own. The default factory setup for any guitar or bass is an average based on ancient factory setups that were based on the preferences of the guy who started the whole thing to begin with, be it Leo or Orville or Grover or Wayne, and those preferences grew from what they knew of the instruments they were stuck with.
...higher action generally results in a clearer tone. This is because the strings have less chance of hitting the adjacent frets under max oscillation (such as from a heavy attack). Lower action has a tendency to introduce rattle and clank as the strings contact the frets with aggressive attack. Super-low action is do-able, but you might want to look into flatwound or tapewound strings for that to reduce the chance (or at least the noise) of banging the frets.
I've never had a reference as far as relief and action.
What's low and comfortable for most bassists?
Awesome response thank you!!PS also, fret size and neck radius change things up too - sometimes what you'll need to get decent hammer-on and slapping capability will seem kinda counterintuitive...or an otherwise perfect feeling fast and low setup will be practically unhammerable and unslappable. Check for that if you need that functionality. If you find it lacking, mess around with raising individual strings action and following/not following the radius.
Might also consider wildly different actions between strings depending on your needs. Set the most desirable action on E and A and max out capabilities at the expense of low action on D&G, that sorta thing...or, perhaps, the comverse - max capabilities and tone with high action elsewhere, but a very low action on your first string to give you a chance to do speedy guitar lead-like licks on the highest frets
...as many said, just too much variance to definitively generalize!
Unfortunately everything depends on the strings.
For lowest action with minimal fret buzz all along the neck (if that is your thing) you will need different neck bow depending on what strings you use. Especially with round versus hex cores there are significant differences, and not limited to that. Some string just take much wider swings.
What have yoy found to "swing narrowest"? Never did know the bass recipe for that, and its WAAAY too expensive to experiment aimlessly...