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Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers

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Fender Jazz Marcus Miller Signature Edition Price: £800 (at time of purchase) Website:. B is therefore 1998-99, which I am calling a '99. It is the second year of the Marcus Miller Jazz bass models. Fender: Fender Japan Serial guide - the most complete and updated chart Fender Japan Production Serial numbers Dates JV + 5 digits 1982 - 1984 SQ + 5 digits (Squier only) 1983 - 1984 (MIJ) E + 6 digits 1984 - 1989. Hallo everybody!. Thanks for your reply! The serial number Fender Jazz Bass Highway One is Z7. What is my 60th anniversary fender stratocaster mim custom deluxe.Changes to the Fender Artist Series Marcus Miller and Geddy Lee Jazz Basses. And right on the heel of the neck where the serial number is,. Fender, Geddy Lee, Japan, Jazz Bass.

  1. Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers List
  2. Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers Free

Hiya!

It was a stroke of genius when Fender Musical Instruments Corporation decided in 1998 to use Fender Japan to produce its Marcus Miller and Geddy Lee artist series Jazz Basses. Their Japanese affiliate has consistently produced high-quality instruments for a fraction of the cost of their domestically built products. I have owned and reviewed both of these basses, and they are very good players and are pretty smart-looking too. But it seems that all good things eventually come to an end.

Serial

Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers List

This past summer I was looking at one of the 3-tone sunburst Geddy Lee basses, and right on the heel of the neck where the serial number is, the serial had an MX prefix with a note that it was made in Mexico. Gasp! Then I checked a Marcus Miller bass and it said the same thing. Double gasp!

I don’t really have anything against the Mexican-built basses as they are also good instruments, but it was still quite a shock. But I should not be too surprised, as the margins on these guitars must be getting very low for Fender. When these models came out the exchange rate was around 130 Yen to the dollar, and now it is around 80 Yen to the dollar. That is a lot less Yen for each guitar that gets sold, and customers really screamed like spoiled little children when the prices were raised a few years ago, so there is not a lot of wiggle room for Fender in this situation.

Number sequences starting with an 'L' are considered to have been stamped between late 1962 and 1965 prior to Fender being bought by CBS. If your neck plate has a large scripted 'F', it is considered to have been stamped between late 1965 and 1976 if it includes a number sequence starting from 100000 through 750000. Up for sale is my recently acquired Japanese Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass in borderline mint condition. I just cannot wean myself off my Modulus Flea, so this is too nice a bass to have sat around not being played. Serial Number dates it to 2006-2008. I'll have to find some scales to weigh it properly, but it's very lightweight for one of these.

There are some visible differences to the basses, most notably that the Marcus Miller battery compartment is now in a different location and the Geddy neck seems a little thicker, but they both still seem to play well.

But, the main reason I bring this up now Is that Guitar Center is clearing out their older stock of these basses for stupid cheap money. The one by my house had Japanese Geddy Lee Basses priced at $699 and $799, which is the best bargain I have ever seen on these. If you really want one that was built in Japan, now is the time to buy because they are not going to get any easier to find, and they certainly are not going to get any cheaper.

Mahalo!

Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers Free

Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers
Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers

Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers List

This past summer I was looking at one of the 3-tone sunburst Geddy Lee basses, and right on the heel of the neck where the serial number is, the serial had an MX prefix with a note that it was made in Mexico. Gasp! Then I checked a Marcus Miller bass and it said the same thing. Double gasp!

I don’t really have anything against the Mexican-built basses as they are also good instruments, but it was still quite a shock. But I should not be too surprised, as the margins on these guitars must be getting very low for Fender. When these models came out the exchange rate was around 130 Yen to the dollar, and now it is around 80 Yen to the dollar. That is a lot less Yen for each guitar that gets sold, and customers really screamed like spoiled little children when the prices were raised a few years ago, so there is not a lot of wiggle room for Fender in this situation.

Number sequences starting with an 'L' are considered to have been stamped between late 1962 and 1965 prior to Fender being bought by CBS. If your neck plate has a large scripted 'F', it is considered to have been stamped between late 1965 and 1976 if it includes a number sequence starting from 100000 through 750000. Up for sale is my recently acquired Japanese Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass in borderline mint condition. I just cannot wean myself off my Modulus Flea, so this is too nice a bass to have sat around not being played. Serial Number dates it to 2006-2008. I'll have to find some scales to weigh it properly, but it's very lightweight for one of these.

There are some visible differences to the basses, most notably that the Marcus Miller battery compartment is now in a different location and the Geddy neck seems a little thicker, but they both still seem to play well.

But, the main reason I bring this up now Is that Guitar Center is clearing out their older stock of these basses for stupid cheap money. The one by my house had Japanese Geddy Lee Basses priced at $699 and $799, which is the best bargain I have ever seen on these. If you really want one that was built in Japan, now is the time to buy because they are not going to get any easier to find, and they certainly are not going to get any cheaper.

Mahalo!

Fender Marcus Miller Jazz Bass Serial Numbers Free

Sire Guitars has announced several major upgrades to their Marcus Miller line of bass guitars ranging from the pickups to the serial number system. Nearly every bass they make has been upgraded in some way.

The biggest change is in the second generation pickups, which applies to the V7, V7 Vintage, V9, P7, M7, and V3 models. Sire writes that the pickups are completely redesigned.

“The 2nd Gen Marcus Miller pickups are made with different magnets and coils for higher resolution and clearer sound,” they write. “We have been collaborating with Marcus Miller to tailor the best sound balance and it will be introduced in the 2nd Gen series. The exterior of the pickup has also been upgraded as it is now printed with a logo.”

The V7, P7, and M7 models will now have ebony fingerboards instead of rosewood. Every model will now have a satin neck finish and rolled fretboard edges that Sire says gives a firmer and more natural grasp. More miscellaneous changes include an ashwood battery cover, a pickup cover for the five-string V7, and a 2N added to the serial number to identify the second generation.

The 2nd Generation Marcus Miller Sire Basses range in price from $369 to $1,199.





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