I only had to replace the battery in my active basses every couple of years and that was gigging every weekend and at least one rehearsal during the week.Found these rechargeable 9V batteries recently which actually provide constant 9V (well, just under 9.1V actually, even better). I've been using the "other kind" of rechargeables for my active basses the past couple years, the ones that are actually only 8.4V and where the voltage will gradually decrease over time. Never been happy with that due to decreased headroom. So far, these new ones seem to hold their voltage perfectlyand they add no noise to the signal(edit: I spoke too soon. These do add noise to at least one of my basses. Sad). Would be interesting to see what's going on inside there.
Edit2: So yeah, not keeping these. They're quiet with one of my basses but add noise to the other. Same with pedals; quiet with some, noisy with others. It's not a whine or hum or anything, just hiss/white noise on top of the signal.
View attachment 86894
Yup, not denying that. I just have this thing where I get super anal about headroom when recording and feel dirty when my battery isn't topped up. It's not rational, especially since I like adding a little dirt anyway, but it is the way it isI only had to replace the battery in my active basses every couple of years and that was gigging every weekend and at least one rehearsal during the week.
You do you, man.Yup, not denying that. I just have this thing where I get super anal about headroom when recording and feel dirty when my battery isn't topped up. It's not rational, especially since I like adding a little dirt anyway, but it is the way it is![]()
Nice! I have a red wildkat w/p90s and a bigsby I really like. I had a 335 but it’s just too big. This is perfect.Nobody bought my Schecter C-1 Classic, but I managed to trade it for an Epiphone Alleykat! I was looking at Gretsch guitars before, so it's more or less in the ballpark.
The switch is weak and the tone pot is scratchy, so I might do some replacements. But I had a bunch of fun playing with it when I quickly tested it, it's very different from the Vintera strat (teal in the background).
It also has a chip on the side of the headstock, but I might just use a marker to cover it up, will have to see if I can figure out anything better. Can't see it when playing so it's not a big issue for me, but would be better even with just black marker or something.
View attachment 87204
Found these rechargeable 9V batteries recently which actually provide constant 9V (well, just under 9.1V actually, even better). I've been using the "other kind" of rechargeables for my active basses the past couple years, the ones that are actually only 8.4V and where the voltage will gradually decrease over time. Never been happy with that due to decreased headroom. So far, these new ones seem to hold their voltage perfectlyand they add no noise to the signal(edit: I spoke too soon. These do add noise to at least one of my basses. Sad). Would be interesting to see what's going on inside there.
Edit2: So yeah, not keeping these. They're quiet with one of my basses but add noise to the other. Same with pedals; quiet with some, noisy with others. It's not a whine or hum or anything, just hiss/white noise on top of the signal.
View attachment 86894
Black nail-polish from the Dollar Store...Nobody bought my Schecter C-1 Classic, but I managed to trade it for an Epiphone Alleykat! I was looking at Gretsch guitars before, so it's more or less in the ballpark.
The switch is weak and the tone pot is scratchy, so I might do some replacements. But I had a bunch of fun playing with it when I quickly tested it, it's very different from the Vintera strat (teal in the background).
It also has a chip on the side of the headstock, but I might just use a marker to cover it up, will have to see if I can figure out anything better. Can't see it when playing so it's not a big issue for me, but would be better even with just black marker or something.
View attachment 87204
Is that an FV-1 based pedal?View attachment 87215
Bought my first reverb pedal! Have a gig coming up and needed some extra ambience. This is the Walrus Audio Fathom in limited run Purple/Sea Foam.
Love the extra sustain switch for ~endless vibes~