Well, I changed them several times over the 46 years that I owned it.
The price I originally paid for the '66 J-bass was $100, in 1972. At that time,
it was only an old bass. No one I knew was worshipping them then, or if they
were, they were worshipping the earlier ones. A '66 was just an old bass,
with an out dated sunburst finish. But it had excellent tone, which never changed.
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In the '70s, mod fever was sweeping the country. I remember some "engineer"
who invited us to come into his workshop where he wanted to try a number of
different components inside the control cavity. He wanted to be our "engineer"
and get paid for keeping us up to date with the latest new thing-ama-bob...
I remember he had a number of different components lined up, and he had the
connectors to try them out one by one, and he asked me, "do you like it like this
or do you like it like that..." and I listened and made my choice and we paid him.
He took out the "worn out" stock Fender (CBS) parts, and installed what I had chosen.
This would have been about 1976... The parts we replaced had worked fine.
That instrument sustained longer than any other instrument, bass or guitar,
that I've ever played. It had wonderful tone... great soulful highs, really powerful
midrange, and a deep growl and oomph like nothing else.
Controlled well by the pots.
And it did before the mods, and it did after the mods.
So I don't know what the mods accomplished, if anything.
I little later, I stripped the 'out dated" sunburst finish off the instrument, and
put the chrome covers and the pick guard in a box, and played it naked. I
thought it looked cooler and more radical that way, and it did. I inserted black
nails in the screw holes...
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I don't remember what he installed, because I didn't understand all the techno-babble
at that time. I knew how to play music, but I didn't understand electronics so well.
The "engineer" told me there were advantages to what he installed in my bass, but
I didn't understand what he was talking about, so I just nodded and looked wise, and
played music on it. It worked fine, as it did before. *shrugs So my choices weren't
wrong... except that they removed the stock parts, and I didn't 'save' them.
Years later, I took my old '66 bass into a good luthier shop, and said to them,
"Get this back to factory spec." They understood what I meant, and did what I
asked. So the pots they installed were likely of equivalent value to the original, but
not antique parts. All the rest of the parts were stock... the jack, the pickups, the
bridge, the nut, the tuners, the chrome covers, the pick guard...
I found the old box where I had saved the chrome covers and the pick guard, and
put them back on. I felt that it looked cooler and more retro that way, and it did.
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The above picture was taken by Elderly Instruments in Lansing Mi. who sold my bass on consignment
for me in 2018, and sent me a check. I don't think it was for sale for more than a month...
I accepted $3000 for it. Stripping the paint was an expensive mistake.
Whatever the pots and caps were, I believe they were equivalent to original equipment because I trusted my luthier to do just this. Nobody claimed they were original parts.
Those were long gone.