It's possible you might learn something from it too, I dunno.
![Neutral :|](./images/smilies/icon_neutral.gif)
The genesis of the inspiration for this build came when I first saw Fender’s Special Edition PJ in “Seafoam Pearl” at my local Sam Ash (though I think it looks more like Surf Green than Seafoam, but oh well). I never had one opinion or another about Surf Green before I saw this bass. I didn’t hate the color, but I didn’t fetish over it either, like some people do... I could take it or leave it.
Well, that all changed when I saw this bass. It was like Surf Green came into my awareness as a guitar color for the very first time... I actually loved the whole look of the bass, with the maple fretboard and block inlays, Badass bridge, and when they first came out they had a pearloid PG (not plain white as in this photo). It just looked super pimp to me, and I couldn’t get it out of my head.
Of course, there were a few niggling details that interfered with me justifying the purchase of this bass... The price fluctuated between $700 and $900 depending on what phase the moon was in I guess, because it went up and down frequently (and my brain still has a hard time thinking of MIM Fenders as costing more than $500). Also, as y’all probably know, I’m more of a Jazz Bass guy. I do own a P-bass (because every bassist should have a P-bass in their arsenal), and I love it, and I didn’t really feel the need to have another one (especially in a PJ configuration, which I’m not fond of), so I would be buying this just because it looks cool, and I can’t get behind that. If it were a CV Squier, and I could get a good deal on one, then maybe... But not for $700, $800 or $900.
Still, the gears kept turning towards a build, or some other alternative, and eventually I remembered that I had seen Jaguar style basses in Surf Green on Rondo in the past (and I’m slightly more attracted to Jaguar-style basses than P-basses), so I went to the website, only to discover that they had none in Surf Green in stock... That’s ok... It was kind of a frivolous idea that didn’t need to be satisfied immediately. I could wait until some more came in.
And I waited... and waited... and waited... Kurt kept telling me he’d be getting some more in stock any day now... so I kept on waiting... [mention]tobijohn[/mention] said I should buy one in “PBU”, because Kurt’s color blind, and PBU is actually Surf Green, but I didn’t want to take any chances so I waited some more...
I think it was over 18 months, then the day finally came when they showed up on the Rondo site!
It didn’t have 2 Jazz pickups, or a maple fretboard with black blocks (and that ugly red tortoise PG would have to go! Why do they put red tort on everything??!), but I bought it anyway, because the fretboard/inlay problem wasn’t really a problem... It was a solution. My #1 needed a new neck and it had a rosewood fretboard with pearloid block inlays (or what SX was calling "pearloid" at the time). I wanted to keep that look, but it would be an expensive neck if bought from ordinary sources, and I couldn't remember the last time I saw any of those necks available on Rondo for individual purchase, so the only way to get one cheaply was to buy an Ursa 4. Not an economical solution under normal circumstances, but in this situation, it worked out well in my favor. As an unexpected bonus, the pearloid and rosewood on these newer SX necks look 10x better than the original necks, so this is a nice upgrade!
I already had the neck I was going to replce the stock one with. While I was waiting for the Surf Green Ursa 4 to come back in stock, some SX bass necks became available on Rondo with maple fretboards and black block “inlays”. It also had the old-style (re-shapeable) headstock, and it only cost $60, so I jumped on that. I was originally planning to pick up a Squier VM ’70s neck, but those cost more than double what an SX neck costs, and I think SX necks are better.
Since I had plenty of time, I reshaped the headstock and refinished the neck while I was waiting. I was going to try to reproduce the headstock shape on the stock neck, but I didn't like the way that looked, and ended up doing something a little more “Fender-esque”.
I typically don't like to make an exact copy of the Fender Headstock shape - especially if I'm putting my own logo on it. Though these old style SX headstocks are big enough to do that (see my previous thread about the original "Custom Jag").