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The Gibson Grabber was a bass guitar introduced in 1973 along with the Gibson Ripper, both designed by Bill Lawrence. The Grabber featured a bolt-on 34 + 1 ⁄ 2 in (876 mm) neck similar to Fender basses and shared a similar body shape with the Ripper. A distinctive feature of the Grabber was its adjustable pickup, which could be positioned by ...
This is a product list of items manufactured by Rickenbacker International Corporation, and predecessor companies, including musical instruments, amplifiers and accessories. The three Rickenbacker Vintage series (B - 1st, V - 2nd and C - 3rd) are listed in numerical order within the relevant product sections, not as a separate grouping, as are ...
The pickup was designed to correct what Casady perceived as a weakness of the original Les Paul Signature bass, which was a lack of tonal definition in ensemble playing situations. [2] The pickup is connected to a transformer with a three-position switch to select output impedance of 50, 250 or 500 ohms.
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Epiphone currently produces an EB-0 which is similar to the late '60s version of the Gibson EB-0, but with a '70s-style three-point bridge and a bolt-on neck. [5] This version, along with the Epiphone EB-3, was discontinued in early 2020 as a part of a major reimagining of the Epiphone brand and lineup.
A class action lawsuit filed against T-Mobile alleges the company charges a hidden fee by misleading customers since 2004.
Pages in category "Epiphone electric bass guitars" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. E.
The 2009 Rippers feature a master volume knob, a mid-range notch filter (captor/inductor), a master tone knob, and a six-position selector switch for choosing between different pickup configurations. [2] The Ripper is "cousin" to the Gibson Grabber and Gibson G3 models also manufactured by Gibson around the same time. All three had the same ...