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Stagg EDB-3/4 BK Electric 3/4 Size Double Bass with Gig Bag Included - Black

  • Based on 63 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
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Color: Black


Features

  • Solid Maple Construction
  • State of the Art Electronics Specially Designed for Double Bass
  • 3/4 Size
  • Black

Description

Stagg EDB-3/4 BK Electric Double Bass with Gig bag - 3/4 Size - Black


Item Weight: 22 pounds


Product Dimensions: 58 x 14 x 9 inches


Domestic Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S. and to APO/FPO addresses. For APO/FPO shipments, please check with the manufacturer regarding warranty and support issues.


International Shipping: This item is not eligible for international shipping. Learn More


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: EDB-3/4 BK


Date First Available: October 1, 2011


Back Material: Maple, Basswood


Color Name: Black


Top Material: Maple


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Stagg EUB
Color: Honey
After nine months and about 50 gigs, I feel I can give a detailed review to help the buyer make a decision. First, the good. The honey color gets a lot of compliments. The electronics are well designed for the most part. The controls can give you a nice thump or great sustain. The solid construction means temperature and humidity extremes don't affect the instrument much, if at all, a considerable load off my mind where I live. Now the bad. The adjustable tail piece digs into the protective tape covering the battery and signal wires. After a few times of raising and lowering the tail piece, the aluminum sticky back RF shield tape got caught on the tail piece shaft inside the instrument and pulled the signal wire out of the circuit board, bringing my future with that instrument to a halt. After replacing the tape, inserting the signal wire back into the circuit board, and replacing the access panels on the back, I had confidence in the instrument again. The original strings couldn't hold a note. They had only a single wire rope in the center and cut my fingers despite being flat wound. A set of nylon-wrapped flat wounds and $150 later and I have strings I can trust. The A-string tuner arrived broken. The tuners appear to be made of inferior metal and have a hard-to-turn tuning ratio. Rather than have the rest of the band tune to my A-string, I replaced all the tuners with some Grover classic bass tuners. It's almost a perfect fit. The mounting screw holes were exact copies of the Grovers. The tuner machine head post holes are exactly across from each other. There's not much room for the posts, and replacements may be too long and interfere with each other. The original tuner posts are very short. A better configuration would have been to stagger the post holes. The belly brace is useless. Can't imagine using it for a real gig. The supplied belly brace was too long. This resulted in an unusually long arm reach to the neck and you compensate by either bending the wrist at a sharper angle or turning the instrument away from you. The fret markers don't appear to be accurately placed on the side of the fingerboard. The fingerboard has some minor dips and rises in it, making exact fingering interesting. There's a single strap button on top. Still looking for Stagg strap suppliers. The tail piece allows the bass to not only move, but also twist. Very annoying during high energy pizzicato or plucking. The nine-volt battery is easy to replace, which is good considering I've had to replace it four times in the last nine months. A fellow musician who plays a guitar says he changes his battery once a year. In summary, the bass appears to be well engineered, but the construction leaves a lot to be desired. The gig bag has good proportions, but two of the three zippers have broken off. If you don't mind changing your own strings, searching for replacements and changing the tuner mechanisms, replacing the shielding on the signal wires and possibly removing the circuit board to reinsert a pulled signal plug, this is a good first electric upright bass for relatively little money.Update: replaced the gig bag zipper pulls with better quality parts. The jack in the back for the signal wire to the amp is exhibiting intermittent connectivity. Guess I'll have to take it apart again and troubleshoot the jack this time. (edit) Jack was not the problem. Turns out it was a loose connector from the jack to the circuit board. Easy fix, press the connector back onto the mother board, put circuit board back into body. As they say at NASA, "this isn't rock science". ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2012 by macdaddy

  • Stagg EUB
Color: Violinburst
After 36 months and about 200 gigs, these are my comments. First, the good. The color and finish get a lot of compliments. The electronics are well designed for the most part. The controls can give you a nice thump or great sustain. The solid construction means temperature and humidity extremes don't affect the instrument much, if at all, a considerable load off my mind where I live. Now the bad. The adjustable tail piece digs into the protective tape, which covers the internal battery and signal wires. I'm talking about inside the bass body itself. After a few times of raising and lowering the tail piece, the aluminum sticky-back RF shield tape got caught on the tail piece shaft inside the instrument and pulled the signal wire out of the circuit board, bringing my future with that instrument to a halt. Replaced the tape, inserted the signal wire back into the circuit board, and I had confidence in the instrument again. The original strings couldn't hold a note. They had only a single wire rope in the center and cut my fingers despite being flat wound. A set of nylon-wrapped flat wounds and $150 later and I have strings I can trust. The A-string tuner arrived broken. The tuners appear to be made of inferior metal and have a hard-to-turn tuning ratio. Rather than have the rest of the band tune to my A-string, I replaced all the tuners with some Grover classic bass tuners. It's almost a perfect fit. The mounting screw holes were exact copies of the Grovers. The tuner machine head post holes are exactly across from each other. There's not much room for the posts, and replacements may be too long and interfere with each other. The original tuner posts are very short. A better configuration would have been to stagger the post holes. The belly brace is useless. Can't imagine using it for a real gig. The supplied belly brace was too long. It was too far to reach the neck and I had to compensate by either bending my wrist at a sharper angle or turning the instrument away. Maybe my arms are too short. (Doubt it.) The fret markers aren't the most accurately placed on the side of the fingerboard. The fingerboard has some minor dips and rises in it, making exact fingering interesting. There's a single strap button on top. Still looking for Stagg strap suppliers. The tail piece allows the bass to not only move, but also twist. Very annoying during high energy pizzicato or plucking. The nine-volt battery is easy to replace, which is good considering I've had to replace it eight times in the last 18 months. A fellow musician who plays a guitar says he changes his battery once a year. In summary, the bass appears to be well engineered, but the construction leaves a lot to be desired. The gig bag has good proportions, but two of the three zippers were broken off. If you don't mind changing your own strings, searching for replacements and changing the tuner mechanisms, replacing the shielding on the signal wires, possibly removing the circuit board to reinsert a pulled signal plug, and replacing the zipper pulls, this is a good first electric upright bass for relatively little money. The bass doesn't come with a stand. I bought the Ingles Adjustable Cello and Bass Stand When you adjust this stand to the bass, it narrows the footprint and makes it easier for wind to blow the bass over. However, the fingerboard latch is easy to use and doesn't bother the strings or scratch the neck. Weights on the feet would help stabilize it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2012 by macdaddy

  • Built on a Monday
Color: Metallic Black
This bass has a few quality control issues that make it a hard buy unless you like to tinker or plan to invest some extra cash to make it playable. 1. The body arrived with a long crack from where the heel attaches and down - about 3 inches long. 2. The neck had a big dip in the surface on one side of the bass - because of this the E string had a buzz in that location but nowhere else on the neck had this problem. 3. My bass came missing the body size support wing so it’s hard to say how comfortable it feels. 4. This is the worst of all the problems I found out of the box - the end pin is not isolated from the body. It is metal on metal contact and it must be contacting some of the Electronics inside the body. Whenever the base is shifted with the weight being supported by the end pin it makes a noisy rustling sound that must be the piezo picking up the vibration of the metal. If the end pin can be isolated then this may not be a problem. The bass sounds incredible and is surprisingly similar to an acoustic upright bass. I was expecting more of that fretless electric bass sound but this is warm, Woody, and with some EQ shifts, you can probably get very close to that sound if that is what you desire. Unfortunately I will be returning the copy that I got and may or may not try another copy to see if this is just a quality control issue. It may just be worth it to save up for a quality plywood acoustic upright and call it a day. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2020 by Carl

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