Fair warning on this bass:
As a die hard lover of fugly finishes, I actually owned that bass for about 5 days and promptly returned it to Olivia's Vintage, where I purchased it from.
http://oliviasvintageguitars.com/bass/guitars/1690/Before I bought it, I interrogated them and they answered every question exactly how I wanted to hear it... I made sure to ask them several times about the neck, to which they assured me was perfect.
When it showed up, it had a set of 20 year old insanely light gauge set of like 35-95 roundwound strings on it and ZERO tension on the truss rod... NONE. It was ready to fall out.
Those late 70's one-piece maple necks are rigid as hell as it is, so needless to say, the neck had a severe backbow and was unplayable even after I threw a heavier set of flats on it and kept all the tension off the truss rod... I gave it a couple of days, hoping the neck would bounce back but it didn't. Not even close.
It sounded fantastic and had a ton of potential... and I got some quotes to have it repaired, but it was too expensive for me to pay for in addition to the $2200 I paid for the bass. Olivia's said they had a guy who would fix it for them and didn't seem willing to chip in for the repairs, so I returned it to them.
In all fairness, Olivia's was incredibly cool about the return... they were apologetic and said that their "setup guy" must have missed something. They also said that the bass would be repaired before it was resold. I have no idea if that was done or not, but I have no reason to believe otherwise.
It really sucked... I've always wanted to have a maple Antigua... it was funky looking and sounded amazing. Since there aren't many out there, it definitely had a cool factor that not many other 70's basses have.
Oh well... maybe I'll find another one someday.