Jeroen wrote:
I love my Atelier Z Baby Z-4J and the Sandberg Lionel that I just bought last week. My Sandberg is quite heavy though, I don’t know if that's specific to my bass or if more of them are like that. The seller of the Sandberg also has a Sire U5 that I got to try and loved, and a Gibson LP Jr DC Tribute bass that I got to borrow and still have at home. All of these are great little basses!
I also have a Atelier Baby Z J that's awesome. I've owned a lot of short scales including Birdsong, Landing, 69 Gibson EB-1 75 Fender Mustang,
Spector Bantam, G&L Fallout Tribute, 2014 Gibson SG (EB-3), Sire U5 modded with EMG Geezer P/J's**(this bass is available at NJ Guitar&Bass Center for $499. disclaimer I no longer own it) a couple Dano Longhorns and a bunch of German Hofners. There may have been a
few others I don't recall. They were all good basses and offered a variety of sounds and usefulness. The only one i kept is the Baby Z.
It's not ultra lite weighing in at 8.6 pounds mainly due to it's northern heavy ash body and lack of body contours (it's a slab body but beveled around the edges
to provide comfort for your left forearm. It's also perfectly balanced with zero neck dive.
The heavy ash body combined with the maple neck give it a fairly bright seventies funk tone. It's a great bass and I use it on many gigs.
It all depends what works best for you. If weight is also a consideration I always liked the sound of the Dano Longhorns, They're inexpensive well made and
weigh on average 5.5 lbs.
There a a lot of options out in today's market for quality short scale basses but being lefty makes it extremely difficult to try
before you by. That's why forums like these can be helpful sources of information.