http://imgur.com/a/zUqlZOK, first things first: yes, it's heavy. (More on that later.)
For sale is my '79 Peavey T40 in natural, which I've owned for around four years. It was bought whilst I was playing bass in a band which has since split, and since I'm a guitar player in the main, this isn't getting used.
There's loads of info about these out there, but the basic rundown is this: USA-made, North American Ash body, maple neck, and two humbuckers which turn into single coils when their respective tone control is dialled back to 8. As well as the pickup selector there's an in/out phase switch, all of which adds up to a hell of a lot of tonal variety. There's a good summary of the possibilities
here, and an excellent feature on the history of the instrument as told by
@FlatEricCollector and Peavey's Chip Todd
here.
This one is in 100% working order from top to bottom, currently strung with flatwounds which gives a fantastic thump to the sound that really anchors in the mix in a live environment. Plays smooth, medium action, loads of life in the frets. The build quality is as good as everyone says it is - it feels completely indestructible.
It's in good but not perfect condition, with various bumps and scrapes over the body and some discolouration on the top and bottom edge (see pics). It's all purely cosmetic. At some point in its life someone obviously got a bit carried away with the campfire sing-a-longs and melted the top part of the case (pictured), but it still shuts and functions perfectly.
The E-string tuning peg has also had a screw swapped out for a non-matching alternative at some point (pictured). I had every intention of sorting this out when I bought it, but never bothered as it functions exactly as it should. Seriously - the tuners on this thing are practically ornamental.
Finally, the weight: around 12lbs, from what I recall. I umm-ed and ahh-ed about buying this for a while because of concerns about the weight, but with a wide leather strap it's never bothered me a jot. Given the way this thing sounds, feels and plays relative to the cost, it feels like a more than fair trade-off. I've not lusted after another bass since I owned it.
£400. Collection from SE London only due to aforementioned anchor-like qualities.
Ta!
Comments
HarrySeven - Intangible Asset Appraiser & Wrecker of Civilisation. Searching for weird guitars - so you don't have to.
Forum feedback thread. | G&B interview #1 & #2 | https://www.instagram.com/_harry_seven_/
Thing is, I've been eyeing up a Mesa D-800 on Basschat today as well and if I'm honest it's amps I need not basses..
Having said that, this T-40 is pretty much identical to one I borrowed in the late 80's early 90's, (which confirms it was a T-40 I had), and they are spectacular basses for tone, build quality and reliability.. @ben_wuh is right tho, they do weigh quite a bit.. *cough*
Need to mull this one over me thinks..
HarrySeven - Intangible Asset Appraiser & Wrecker of Civilisation. Searching for weird guitars - so you don't have to.
Forum feedback thread. | G&B interview #1 & #2 | https://www.instagram.com/_harry_seven_/
They are nice, chunky but not too chunky necks. They would be a better weapon than a tele as well.. serious whacking potential.
Then again, it's my understanding that there was a bit of variance in the Peaveys - depending on year etc.. so this one could be a fattie..@ben_wuh ?
@JezWynd Bridgehouse has already given you more context than I could, but I'd call it a mid-sized C. I've smallish, Trumpian hands and it's comfortable for me.
@Bridgehouse You're right about the weapon thing. I think it'd survive the apocalypse, which means at least the cockroaches will have something to play.
If the d-800 hadn't just surfaced on my radar I'd be all over this - the late 70's early 80's USA Peaveys are massively underrated. Massively. If this had musicman on the headstock it would be the same quality but 4x the price.
To to be fair they were pretty P bass like back in the day... (apart from the tonal variation of course!)