2020 Squier Bass VI (Baritone Guitar Setup)

Tone: It's clean, growly, and tic-tac-ready. The "hot rod" of this Squier Bass VI is that Micah Plante over in Bristol, VT wound and installed completely new Jaguar-style pickups for its owner -- thus transforming this into an instrument with much more character than it would otherwise have stock. 


Feel: The neck is pure vintage Fender in feel -- slim C with a 9 1/2" board radius (well, '70s Fender anyway) and with a 1 5/8" nut. It "feels like home" to a guy like myself. It's got a short scale bass scale length, however, and due to the bridge position that "pushes the neck out" farther -- so it's a little more like holding a long scale bass in orientation.


Interesting features: I have worked on a good half dozen Squier Bass VIs in the last few years and it's my opinion that the necks are not happy with bass-gauge strings on them. They tend to want to warp and twist with all that tension and they're much more relaxed with guitar-like tension on them. I like them a lot better as long-scale baritone guitars capable of ADGCEA or BEADF#B tuning -- something that's achievable on a 30" scale bass-6 like this with 54w-12 gauge strings.  That scale, with those gauge strings, with the Jazzmaster-style whammy, and growly Jaguar-style pickups... it's pretty magic when you've got this plugged into a big-sounding amp. Anyhow, that's why we've got it strung-up and setup as a baritone (BEADF#B at the moment) this way.


Repairs included: Jose gave it a heavy-handed level/dress job on the frets to remove any twist or ski-jump -- something that has been in evidence on every Squier Bass VI we have had in the shop. After that we tag-teamed the setup a bit to dial it in -- adding ferrules for the bridge posts to "lock them" for better tuning stability -- and giving it a good setup. It now plays spot-on and has been stable in service since work was done nearly a month ago.

  • Maker: Fender/Squier
  • Model: Bass VI
  • Body style: almost Jazz Bass-like
  • Weight: 8 lbs 14 oz
  • Scale length: 30"
  • Nut width: 1 5/8"
  • Neck shape: slim C
  • Board radius: 9 1/2"
  • Body width: 13 3/4"
  • Body depth: 1 5/8"
  • Body wood: basswood, maybe?
  • Bridge: Mustang-style
  • Fretboard: rosewood
  • Neck wood: maple
  • Pickups: 3x Micah Plante Jaguar-style
  • Action height at 12th fret: 3/32" bass and 1/16" treble overall (fast, spot-on)
  • String gauges: 54w-12
  • Truss rod: adjustable
  • Neck relief: straight
  • Fret style: medium

Condition notes: It's a relatively new instrument but the finish has already UV-aged a bit aside from its factory-sprayed "aging toner" on the neck. It's in good order but the hardware does show a little wear from use and there's a bit of pickwear on the pickguard and handling wear evidenced in the body. It looks more or less "shopworn" rather than "played out a ton."


It comes with: Sorry, no case.


Consignor tag: WH



















Comments

Oscar Stern said…
Fender 24-100 Gauge Strings allows for EADGBE Octave Down Tuning