I first had a B2AV, before getting a B2A. The B2AV was my first five-string bass, and my first bass with Jazz pickups. I bought that instead of the B2A because I wanted to try Jazz pickups. The short story is that these basses are simply great. Excellent quality for the dollar, built rock-solid, and they will go anywhere.
Man, did I love that B2AV. I did sell it though, to get the B2A, because I am just a 4-string guy. So, I bought a B2A, and it was just as solid. No complaints whatsoever. I ended up selling that too, because I got a Steinberger XL-2 and a Zon VB4, and three headless basses is a bit much.
I can see why many players would dislike the tight string spacing on the Hohner B series. Personally, I like it. It helps me play a little faster.
The surprising thing about the Steinberger, to me, is the weight. The weight is comparable to a full-sized wooden bass. This would absolutely be my go-to bass if I were to join a Metal band. Something else of note is that, to my ear at least, the pickups are unbalanced. I have to turn the blend knob a fair amount towards the bridge pickup (which is actually rotating the knob toward the neck pickup because of how it is wired
) to get what sounds to me like equal pickup volume.
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Gilmourisgod wrote:
I never really "got" what a Rick is capable of until I ran it stereo a few times in my college band. We used to call it the "Piano of Doom". You get all the bottom and all the top in total a**kicking mode.