Following the talk of replacing pickups, I dug out my first guitar: a mid 90's squier jazz bass.
It needed some tlc as it has been somewhat neglected/lent out to mates who were not as fastidious as I am. After looking it over it needed a shim for the neck, new strings and a damn good clean.
So I took everything to bits and got to work with a little soap and water and a nail brush. Urgh, the gunk that came off the fretboard... 1000grit wet & dry paper to remove the fret corrosion (there's still a bit of fret-munch, but a re-crown will have to wait) It now has boiled linseed oil applied to the rosewood mmmm.
So, after the neck shim, truss-rod and string / pickup heigh adjustment everything looks good.
I relented to the dark-side and ordered the shims and a string measure from stew-mac
After a week or so with renewed bass guitar interest, I was looking at the cost of a new fender jazz bass (you know how shiny new guitars are for your inner magpie), when I decided to improve my old squier with some new pickups, control gear and bridge instead, over the cost of a new instrument that I really don't need if I'm honest.
Work, goods aquired, so far.
- shielding and earthing of all cavities with copper tape
- new pickups
- new drop in control gear
- new bridge
- new strings
- new case and strap
This is not going to make my old guitar worth more or anything daft like that; it's a
Squier. But it has been a fun project and my old bass sounds great compared to its original tired form.
[EDIT]
Added as links - I didn't want to bogart the page with loads of huge images.
out with the old
https://imgur.com/dB940Rk
in with the new
https://imgur.com/WXL2dHc
seymour duncan pickups; had these before. I like 'em.
https://imgur.com/gy0oieK
found these guys whilst searching for pots. I like the quality of the work. Much better than my soldering. Cost for the drop-in slightly more than getting all of the parts and consumables and doing it myself. I'd need heat shrink, a new mounting plate, new fender knobs, etc. By the time you take into account the various different suppliers and their delivery charges it was a no-brainer to get the drop-in.
https://imgur.com/49owNnB
hipshot kickass 4 bridge; nicely adjustable. Seems to transfer vibration into the body much better. Has made the string height setup after the neck shim much more precise. That and aligning the strings with the pickups, it's just the job.
https://imgur.com/Rzsebqs
cavities shielded with copper tape and linked with grounding wire. The black wire in the image is the bridge ground, not the link.
https://imgur.com/rLTIWgb
bridge and pickups installed - to get the bridge pickup to fit, I had to file the hole about an 8th of an inch on the short ends and a little around the rounds for the mounting screws.
Squier jazz bass guitars use the same size rout for both pickup holes - ie the neck pickup slot.
https://imgur.com/fvxXYta
final result, all cleaned up and adjusted with new strap and on top of a new soft case. Oh, and rotosound sm77 40-60-80-100 flatwound strings.
All in all I'm quite pleased with the results. Sounds and plays better than it ever has.
Bonus: My fretless westone thunder 2 had some work on the fretboard, it needed some sanding (up to 2.5k grit) and oiling to bring it back to life.
https://imgur.com/7GfkyZ3
https://imgur.com/9D7HfDo
https://imgur.com/prDEXBl
frettboard now has reflections. Kind of hard to see with my potato camera, but it's super smooth.