Hi lads,
just want to share my joy of my first homebuild, a lefty (obviously) Fenderbird.
http://i243.photobucket.com/albums/ff10 ... 1276007988
http://i243.photobucket.com/albums/ff10 ... 1276007987
http://i243.photobucket.com/albums/ff10 ... 1276007987
It's made with a Mahogany body (my parents table, aged in a smokers livingroom for more than 20 years)
Squier II P neck
Dimarzio Model G Humbucker
Volume Pot
3 way parallel/single/serie toggle switch.
Plays great with 3 different sounds. I've only tried it alone on my Marshall JMP stack, now i'll see how it sounds in the mix with the group.
The paintwork is done by my 4 year old son and 1 1/2 year old daughter...adds affective value to it.
Cheers
Fenderbird - my first homebuild
Fenderbird - my first homebuild
Life's a bitch...and then you die
- Agent00Soul
- Posts: 904
- Joined: June 18th, 2009, 2:36 pm
- Location: Londinium
Re: Fenderbird - my first homebuild
John Entwistle would be proud!
- leftybassman392
- Posts: 196
- Joined: June 17th, 2009, 8:13 am
- Location: Northampton, England
Re: Fenderbird - my first homebuild
Love the artwork - shame about the bass!
Only joking.
There's something very satisfying about doing it yourself - I built a guitar when I was at school. (It wasn't as good as this one, but I just loved doing it.)
What's it like for weight? I would guess that a slab of mahogany that size would be fairly heavy.
Only joking.
What's it like for weight? I would guess that a slab of mahogany that size would be fairly heavy.
Andy K.
http://www.myspace.com/consortiumsessionplayers
1977 Jazz 4
'98 Thumb BO 5
'05 SEI Original Headless 5
'09 Regenerate Axiom 4
'90's Roscoe LG3000 fretless
PJB Amps
http://www.myspace.com/consortiumsessionplayers
1977 Jazz 4
'98 Thumb BO 5
'05 SEI Original Headless 5
'09 Regenerate Axiom 4
'90's Roscoe LG3000 fretless
PJB Amps
Re: Fenderbird - my first homebuild
Thanks guys,
Don't know if John would be proud, he'd probably smack me in the back of my head if he saw it
I've downsized the body because i wanted a bass that was less heavy than my (very heavy, as you probably know) '78 Pbass. You can see the bridge is pretty close to the end of the body and it's only 38 mm thick, I must say that it's very light. The only thing is that the stock tuners on the baseballbat Squier neck are heavy as hell, don't know what they made them of, must change them soon.
Don't know if John would be proud, he'd probably smack me in the back of my head if he saw it
I've downsized the body because i wanted a bass that was less heavy than my (very heavy, as you probably know) '78 Pbass. You can see the bridge is pretty close to the end of the body and it's only 38 mm thick, I must say that it's very light. The only thing is that the stock tuners on the baseballbat Squier neck are heavy as hell, don't know what they made them of, must change them soon.
Life's a bitch...and then you die
- PunkRockBassist
- Posts: 682
- Joined: July 1st, 2010, 1:32 pm
- Location: Ewing , New Jersey
Re: Fenderbird - my first homebuild
yes he would ripAgent00Soul wrote:John Entwistle would be proud!
Re: Fenderbird - my first homebuild
oh now that is soooooo cool looking!!!! ( minus the fenderhead for me ), but if I saw that thing for sale in any other circumstance, it would be gone the same day 
resident Charvel/Jackson freakazoid