Sorry about the crappy cell phone pic... I've been meaning to do this forever and kept forgetting. When I finally rembered before I went to bed last night, all I had was my cell phone and I was too lazy to dig out the camera.
Anyway...
From left to right...
1.)
G&L L-2500 lined fretless: "Blackburst" ash body, 1/4 sawn maple neck, matching headstock. I took out the preamp (I think they're horrible) and wired it completely passive. The bass and treble controls in G&L basses are already passive, so they stayed the same. The front switch is still the pickup selector as well, but I wired the two back switches to control each pickup. They will go series, parallel, and in single coil mode. Since each pickup has its own switch, you can now have the front pickup single coil and the rear pickup parallel... front pickup series and rear pickup single coil... etc, etc, etc. There are a TON of tonal options now, and it sounds frikkin' SICK. I have another fretless 5 on order that will probably take another year+ to complete... so this one MIGHT be up for sale at some point if anyone is interested. I dunno though... it sounds so good, I might have to keep it anyway.
2.)
'72/'75 Fender Franken-P: '72 alder body with a '75 maple neck. Early 80's Fender tuners with a Hipshot D-tuner, 70's reissue bridge (putting a Badass II on tonight), Chandler pickguard, and Duncan Antiquity II pickups. I wired it up with true lefty reverse audio taper (log) CTS pots, cloth wire and a fancy oil can cap. I have the original '75 body, but it was butchered with an extra p-route in the neck position and an incorrect sized pickguard was drilled into it with bad fills on the old holes, etc... and I also have the OHSC which is a plus.
3.)
Zon Sonus 519: Buckeye burl top, matching ramp, 3-band Bart pre with custom knob layout, Bart hum-cancelling "skinnys", Hipshot Ultralights, wenge tone block, swamp ash body... this is by far the most even and tight sounding bass I have ever had. Sounds exactly how it's supposed to... a jazz bass on steroids... but it's more than that. Strongest fundamental on any bass I have ever heard. Plays like butter... has to be played/heard to be believed. This alternates as my main bass.
4.)
Mike Lull M5V: Oly white ash body, vintage tinted maple neck with birdseye maple board, Hipshot Ultralight tuners, Hipshot bridge, Nordy two-band preamp, custom Lull/Duncan linear hum cancelling pickups, and custom wiring with passive tone control. This bass came with an Aguilar OBP-3 and the Duncan single coils, but... even though I leave my basses mostly set flat and I'm not much of an onboard EQ tweaker, I do use it sometimes and I found the OBP-3 to be pretty useless... and the single coils were, well... noisy. So I got a Nordy two band from Rod, and I could not be happier... the highs are INSANELY clean and clear and the lows are super tight and defined. The bass itself had plenty of mids on its own so I'm glad I went 2-band, and I tend to think mid controls on preamps can muddy your tone. The Nordy is a much more musical preamp. Also, the Lull/Duncan linear HC's I put in sound just as good as the SC's, but they're dead quiet. This is my other main bass.
5.)
Fender Custom Shop '64 NOS Jazz: Seafoam green alder body, 1/4 sawn maple neck, rosewood board... everything is stock, except I added a Hipshot D-tuner and I wired it up with true lefty reverse audio taper (log) CTS pots, cloth wire and a fancy oil can cap. In my humble opinion, this bass is what all other passive 4-strings aspire to be. It sounds and plays sooooooooooooooo good... I seriously pick it up and play it, just so I can hear it because it makes me feel that good. And if my bands didn't require a low B for a lot of material... or maybe I should say, if I wasn't so damned attached to the low b-string... I would be playing this bass probably 100% of the time.
Not pictured: Warmoth unlined fretless Jazz 4-string
*whew*