FENDER Highway One PRECISION BASS Rare Blonde Nitro P USA American +Cover 43071
Description
You're looking at a 2006, 60th Anniversary Fender Highway One Precision Bass in rare Honey Blonde finish. It's got a very cool vintage vibe with the large ashtray pickup cover. Great feel and tone. Frets are great with only mild flattening. Features an alder body and a one piece, modern C-shaped maple neck with 9.5-inch radius and rosewood fretboard with 20 jumbo frets. A split coil humbucker dishes out classic P-Bass tones, while the stock Leo Quann Bad Ass II bridge and vintage style tuners steady your wires.Hip 70s headstock logo, and the white guard on blonde finish is a real head turner. Thin satin Nitro finish really lets the tone out, and ages well and makes for a cool natural relic vibe. This one has a few mild marks shown in pics, just enough to give it that worn in look. See last couple pics where I took the cover off to show the stock pickups. Currently strung with old flat wounds, but I can change them to round wound if buyer requests it. Weight is 8 pounds, 12 ounces. No case. (Note: I will include a black aftermarket hardcase if buyer chips in $25 for the extra shipping cost--USA only.) I do a full cleaning and setup on all guitars. (Details on my setups and packing at bottom of listing.) Thanks!
What You Get
-- Full setup, cleaning.
-- FREE USA shipping.
-- 30-day return policy.
-- Ship within 1 business day--pro packing.
-- Full setup, cleaning.
-- FREE USA shipping.
-- 30-day return policy.
-- Ship within 1 business day--pro packing.
See below for video demo of similar guitar.
Guitar Setup
My setup on guitars includes new strings (9s or 10s depending on what the nut is cut for), overall polish, cleaning any gunk off fingerboard, oiling neck, and polishing frets when necessary. I spray out any pots that are noisy. I turn the truss rod (if necessary) and set string height at low-to-medium action depending on string buzz present. Since setup is highly subjective you may need to get it set to your particular needs by your personal luthier. I don't claim to be a trained luthier, but I'm able to set guitars/basses for a reasonable out-of-box experience and have had very few complaints. If you're looking for the perfect setup on a used guitar, please expect to take it to a trained luthier who is familiar with your individual playing style and preferences. ps: basses get the same setup minus the new strings. Thanks!
Packing
I use quality boxes, thick bubble wrap, and peanuts to pack guitars. I have a very high rate of successful guitar and bass shipping (meaning few damaged instruments). I have been doing this 10 years and know how to pack well--with or without a hard case. I wrote a detailed story with photos on how I pack a guitar, which you can find on my StillKickinMusic site blog. If you Google "THERE IN ONE PIECE...How to Pack a Guitar" you will find it. Thanks.
My setup on guitars includes new strings (9s or 10s depending on what the nut is cut for), overall polish, cleaning any gunk off fingerboard, oiling neck, and polishing frets when necessary. I spray out any pots that are noisy. I turn the truss rod (if necessary) and set string height at low-to-medium action depending on string buzz present. Since setup is highly subjective you may need to get it set to your particular needs by your personal luthier. I don't claim to be a trained luthier, but I'm able to set guitars/basses for a reasonable out-of-box experience and have had very few complaints. If you're looking for the perfect setup on a used guitar, please expect to take it to a trained luthier who is familiar with your individual playing style and preferences. ps: basses get the same setup minus the new strings. Thanks!
Packing
I use quality boxes, thick bubble wrap, and peanuts to pack guitars. I have a very high rate of successful guitar and bass shipping (meaning few damaged instruments). I have been doing this 10 years and know how to pack well--with or without a hard case. I wrote a detailed story with photos on how I pack a guitar, which you can find on my StillKickinMusic site blog. If you Google "THERE IN ONE PIECE...How to Pack a Guitar" you will find it. Thanks.