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Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 4:36 pm
by tim

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 5:09 pm
by Matt R.
Me either. But I like it. That wenge is so gorgeous.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 6:56 pm
by tim
Hat tip to Paulo for sharing this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ushG-LPRFb8

Diff model but same pups.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 7:28 pm
by Murzenquest
These are pretty cool. A lot of doom metal/ sludge guys play these. Coincidentally, the guy that builds them, Sasha Dunable, is in a pretty good band called Intronaut and their bass player is a lefty. Joe Lester; also plays in Secret Chiefs 3, or did when I saw them. Killer show...


https://www.premierguitar.com/articles/ ... -intronaut

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 7:58 pm
by tim
Oh yeah, this is worth watching also:

https://youtu.be/1ENCJ8rAMCM?t=1260

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 9:48 pm
by Jeroen
tim wrote:Oh yeah, this is worth watching also:

https://youtu.be/1ENCJ8rAMCM?t=1260
Feels weird seeing an experienced fretless player play vertical vibratos on a fretless rather than following the length of the string.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 18th, 2020, 11:19 pm
by donahue
Since we're all picking shit apart lately I'm gonna have a go: I'm so over these $2000 basses with the $50 garage finish jobs. When did skipping grain fill become a thing? It looks like a job I attempted in my garage that went sideways. Fill the grain people. All this is a cop out of a proper finish job in the name of some kind of back-to-basics hip thing. All that work building a nice instrument so the finish can start rubbing through or flaking off in a day?

I'm all about natural finishes and seeing the grain. Hell, I prefer natural finishes. But fill the damn grain and make the thing smooth to the touch. These basses along with Sereks are only halfway completed imo with a price tag of a finish instrument. End rant.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 20th, 2020, 1:56 am
by fivebass52
donahue wrote:Since we're all picking shit apart lately I'm gonna have a go: I'm so over these $2000 basses with the $50 garage finish jobs. When did skipping grain fill become a thing? It looks like a job I attempted in my garage that went sideways. Fill the grain people. All this is a cop out of a proper finish job in the name of some kind of back-to-basics hip thing. All that work building a nice instrument so the finish can start rubbing through or flaking off in a day?

I'm all about natural finishes and seeing the grain. Hell, I prefer natural finishes. But fill the damn grain and make the thing smooth to the touch. These basses along with Sereks are only halfway completed imo with a price tag of a finish instrument. End rant.
Normally, I'd agree, but this is Wenge, a naturally open wood grain... you just don't fill this wood in... Warwick uses it a lot in their bass bodies..

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 20th, 2020, 7:51 am
by Matt R.
fivebass52 wrote:
donahue wrote:Since we're all picking shit apart lately I'm gonna have a go: I'm so over these $2000 basses with the $50 garage finish jobs. When did skipping grain fill become a thing? It looks like a job I attempted in my garage that went sideways. Fill the grain people. All this is a cop out of a proper finish job in the name of some kind of back-to-basics hip thing. All that work building a nice instrument so the finish can start rubbing through or flaking off in a day?

I'm all about natural finishes and seeing the grain. Hell, I prefer natural finishes. But fill the damn grain and make the thing smooth to the touch. These basses along with Sereks are only halfway completed imo with a price tag of a finish instrument. End rant.
Normally, I'd agree, but this is Wenge, a naturally open wood grain... you just don't fill this wood in... Warwick uses it a lot in their bass bodies..

Warwick just uses it in necks I think. Can’t remember what the bodies are. But yeah, on Wenge, no fill needed. It’s freakin gorgeous.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 20th, 2020, 8:36 am
by Jeroen
fivebass52 wrote:Normally, I'd agree, but this is Wenge, a naturally open wood grain... you just don't fill this wood in... Warwick uses it a lot in their bass bodies..
Only the neck and fingerboard are, the body is mahogany :)

Warwick bodies are mostly bubinga, ovangkol (on many Thumb BO's), maple and ash.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: May 20th, 2020, 8:56 am
by donahue
Jeroen wrote:
fivebass52 wrote:Normally, I'd agree, but this is Wenge, a naturally open wood grain... you just don't fill this wood in... Warwick uses it a lot in their bass bodies..
Only the neck and fingerboard are, the body is mahogany :)
Yes, thank you. and that's what's I was referring to. I know the deal with Wenge.

Re: Dunable Thunderclapper -- $1,800 Reverb

Posted: December 20th, 2020, 5:40 pm
by NoXX
Digging this thread up again, as I recently watched a cool cover by the Two Minutes to Late Night crew, with Jeff Matz from High on Fire. I love High on Fire, and Jeff's tone is immense.. he's a Dunable guy:

Cover here:

https://music.mxdwn.com/2020/06/22/news ... ndys-room/

Back to the Dunable, I was impressed to see that all three of their basses can be configured left-handed, with a good collection of choices:

https://dunableguitars.com/collections/basses

Alright, just enough time to slap on some corpse paint and rock out before dinner time :mrgreen: