superheavydeathmetal wrote:
I love the Hohner basses. I rave about them quite a bit.
Anyway, I bought the Steinberger.
I offered $1800. I thought he was ignoring the offer as a low-ball, but then countered with $1900 a few hours ago. That was a much better counter than I expected so I jumped on it.
I would love an honest opinion from one of you more knowledgeable guys (muck, you have one, right?). Please feel free to throw in your two cents and don't be afraid to tell me I got suckered, but from what I know, I think $1900 is okay.
Congrats on the purchase. I was seriously considering it as well, but I just can't part with that kind of money right now and I really need to be selling off inventory than adding to it.
Anyway, you paid a very good price. Lefty XL2s are rare as hen's teeth, and a white one? Fuggetaboutit. There might be less than 5 in existence. Yours is likely an early 1990 based on the serial #. They're great unique basses, but they do require a certain adjustment. Their scale is longer, and string spacing is narrower. I personally don't find them the easiest basses to slap on for that reason, but it can be done. Their tone is a modern, somewhat sterile sound, but they cut through the mix nicely. They truly are an engineering marvel though, from the fold out leg rest to the boomerang pivoting strap holder, Steinberger took everything under consideration when he reinvented the bass. Make sure everything checks out okay when it arrives, obviously, particularly frets, electronics, and especially the mini tuners/string clamp holders. They are notorious for cracking and nearly impossible to replace. (Thanks to Bill at Hipshot for making me a set of replacements for mine).
Enjoy! I'm jealous.