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Gibson Victory Bass
Manufacturer Gibson
Period1981 – 1986
Construction
Body type Solid, double cut
Neck joint Bolt-on neck
Scale34 in (860 mm)
Woods
Body Mahogany
Fretboard Rosewood
Hardware
BridgeFixed
Pickup(s)Single humbucker (Standard)
Dual humbuckers (Custom and Artist)

The Gibson Victory Bass was an electric bass guitar produced by Gibson Guitars from 1981 until 1986. [1] [2] [3] It was a bass guitar variant of the Gibson Victory. [4] [5] It was not a successful model. [6]

Models

The Victory Bass was only available as a four-string solid-body bass guitar. The scale was 34″, body made of maple and neck was three-ply maple with rosewood fingerboard. A fret-less version was an option. [4] Three models of Victory Basses were produced:

  • Standard - one Series VIIIB humbucker, three-ply maple neck, 24-fret rosewood fretboard, and passive electronics with one volume and one tone knob and a series/parallel switch.
  • Custom - two Series VIIIB humbuckers, three-ply maple neck, 24-fret rosewood fretboard, and passive electronics with one volume and one tone knob, bass and treble controls, a pickup selector switch, and a series/parallel switch.
  • Artist - two Series VIIIB humbuckers, three-ply maple neck, 24-fret rosewood fretboard, and passive/active electronics with one volume and one tone knob, bass and treble controls, a pickup selector switch, a series/parallel switch, and a three-position passive/active switch.

Prices

In the used market it can go from $600 to $1600. [4]

External sources

References

  1. ^ "1981 Gibson Victory Bass Owners Manual >> Vintage Guitar and Bass". www.vintageguitarandbass.com. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  2. ^ Roberts, Jim; Roberts, James H. (2003). American Basses: An Illustrated History & Player's Guide. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN  978-0-87930-721-9.
  3. ^ Bacon, Tony (October 12, 2012). The Ultimate Guitar Sourcebook. Race Point Publishing. p. 246. ISBN  978-1-61058-842-3.
  4. ^ a b c "Some sounds from the vintage Gibson Victory Bass | eBass". September 27, 2017. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  5. ^ Gruhn, George; Carter, Walter (1999). Gruhn's Guide to Vintage Guitars: An Identification Guide for American Fretted Instruments. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 250. ISBN  978-0-87930-422-5.
  6. ^ Bacon, Tony (June 1, 2011). Flying V, Explorer, Firebird: An Odd-Shaped History of Gibson's Weird Electric Guitars. Backbeat Books. ISBN  978-1-4768-5611-7.