So my Vader 5 lefty came in. It was worth the wait for sure. These are nice basses for the money.
I went with a fairly simple layout on this one as I had no idea what I was getting into. The closest I have had was a Hohner 5 for a short time but no other headless basses. It is a bit different and sometimes has that "falling off the end of the earth" feel around first position however at the same time, wonderful ergonomically.
Build quality is outstanding. I thought it would be considering my first Carvin was a used LB70 just a few years ago that I was pleasantly impressed with (never should have sold it). The body is pretty small considering the pointed style sides and fairly short length. I went with simple trans red over alder with no top to keep costs down a bit and the finish is quite nice.
The neck on this one is a maple with birdseye fretboard and a satin finish. Birdseye is very prominent and is a really nice slab chosen. The satin is well applied and smooth all around. I'm glad I went with it as I find satin to have a great feel yet fairly durable vs a rubbed oil finish. These necks though wide spaced (19mm I believe) are fairly flat in the back profile. They are not quite say Warrior flat (flattest I've ever played) but flatter than most which makes it comfortable even with the wide spacing. Fretwork is great and the heel has a nice transition and a really cool (IMO) finish line from satin to body paint.
I like what they have done with the head piece. It is designed not to require double-ball end strings. I assume the best way to string would be to start at the bridge and pull through the head piece with the screw down just enough to hold the string in, cut, then pull the string back a hair to keep the string end from cutting up the player. You can't really file the ends there as it would damage the head piece.
Bridge is great (can't go wrong with that tried and true design) and pickups are hot yet fairly neutral. They are as hot in the output as advertised and fairly consistent from top to bottom. I appreciate the passive vol-blend-tone setup as I have been leaning towards more passive setups lately.
They are on the lighter side though I have not weighed it yet. I was very pleased with the overall weight.
Killer gigbag. They really stepped that up with the more rigid style bag vs something thin and fold able.
Nitpicks: Well the only few I have so far is the lack of string spacing options (I would have gone with 17.5mm) and where the neck sits. It's just something I have to get use to. I'm so use to these G&L, MM's, Fenders, etc where the neck sits a bit further into the body giving a shorter feel overall, especially at first position. This is placement more similar to say a Spector where it is not set in as far giving it a longer feel. Again, time on that. I also would like to see inverse pots on the vol and tone but I can live without those.
I dig it and recommend it. Something different, especially for us lefties without spending an arm and a leg. I surely see another in my future.
Some photos:
http://littlesimy.com/schtuff/Vader5/photos_display.php