It's a little late but it may help. A streamer stage 1 is a maple bass. Flamed maple older vibe to it. It also only comes in a broad neck. The stage 2 is the exotic African wood bass. Azfelia body and wenge neck. More of an aggressive sound persay. An warwick has always even against graphite necks. It's all about the nice old school wood. Hope this helps.
Hi there! First, what you see in 2:44 is not something coming from the Warwick factory. Chloe Trujillo painted, drew and carved the finish on that bass. If you take a look at the rest of that bass, it clearly was supposed to look worn off/used. Second, I don't see any bare wood at 2:23. The bass shown there is a chrometone finish, and that process simply doesn't allow for any place not to be covered. It's probably the light refletion around the input jack. Thanks for your support, though!
Nice bass not so keen on Metallica style dot mark but if Rob uses it for day job fair enough I mean c'mon he looks after jaco bass battery plug active pick-up but what type of coil and style r his pickups they looked high on body maybe big magnet or do U reseat them when U string and intonate bass all in all excellent quality & craftsmanship even wear gloves when U construct is a nice touch !!
Here’s an original solo bass composition of mine on a Warwick.. Thank you for checking out! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xfYnGbv4zWw.html
Can you explain the main differences between a Streamer 1 and a Streamer 2 Bass please? Could a customer get full neck graphites if custom ordered? Thank you for any information and keep up the great work.
They are both neck through basses. Streamer Stage 1 you can see the neck through the body from the front, its visible ala 80's neck through basses. On the Streamer Stage 2 its still a through neck but they put the body top laminate over the top of it and blend it in where neck joins body so from the front it looks like a bolt on, but its not. You could have a graphite neck theoretically probably easier on a stage 1, but i don't know if warwick would do it, you would have to ask the custom shop direct.
Couldn't help but notice some little details on the 4 string that kind of ruined it for me. The area around the input jack in 2:33 shows some of the bare wood, which doesn't look like it was touched up. It also looks like the neck wasn't properly sealed up when the headstock was being painted, which means that there isn't a crisp line between the paint and the bare wood in 2:44 Warwicks are killer basses, but details like these are things I don't expect to see in any custom shop basses.