it was english sycamore body,black anodized neck and all black tuners.
here is a picture of it on the bench:
![Image](http://i418.photobucket.com/albums/pp261/Etidorhpaunderground/IMG_1924_zpsgi6j6svm.jpg)
customerwon the auction on an auction site and paid.then sent me an email and asked if i could add relief to the body where his arm lays over it. so basically he bid on it,won it then was unhappy with it right away before he even got it. so i offered to sand some relief into it (love my oscillating spindle sander) this is of course after i had done a set up on it.
so i had to take the strings off, do the work, and then re finish it ,and then do another set up on it and sent it out.
i got a delivery confirmation that he received and an hour later i got an email from him saying :
"i really hate to say it but the bass isnt right. my hand cramped up when i was playing it" and (here is where it gets weird)
he says,"i can get each string in tune but not with one another"
(i think to myself that the muscles in your hand have nothing to do with our build, and its scientifically impossible to not have the strings be in tune if they are in tune!!)
so he says he wants to return it. wants a refund is willing to compromise on shipping costs and the work.
i say send it back and well get you a refund but the custom work i did on the bass ( i spent about 5 hours on it) has to be compensated for but i told him that id charge him half the normal rate for the labor.
i partially refund him , i get the bass back and right out of the box the tuner is busted on the D string.
i ask him if that was maybe why it wasnt in tune and he says it wasnt broken,so now its been broken in shipping.
so now i have one altered bass with a busted tuning machine. i fix the tuning machine and bring the bass over to a luthier who is my mentor and ask him to go over the bass. he plugs it in and tunes it. he criticized my string spacing ( i put them too far apart and my g string is too close to teh edge) then he offers a really great suggestion about widening the fingerboards beyond the radius of teh neck just a bit to make it wider,cool. then he says it sounds fine. intonation is fine.
i asked him if he thought that it was worth returning and he said no.
the guy now is having a fit because he wants a FULL refund. so i refuse and the auction site gives it to him then tries to come after me. i tell them what happened and they agree to let me keep the lousy 300 bucks for the "damage" even though i told them the tuner is like a minimal part of the work to fix it,whatever.
then a week later i get another guy who calls the studio and wants us to build him a custom. cool!! im on the phone with him explaining my philosophy of building instruments that are raw, tough and not fine polished pieces of furniture but tools that can be used hard etc etc. i tell him that we leave build marks on the castings and the finishes are brush painted etc. teh next day he wins a bass i have up on the auction site. im now totally confused becaseu he never mentioned that he was bidding on it or anything. then he asks if he should just pay me for the custom one and cancel the sale or if he should just keep this one and see. i tell him its easier to just keep this one and see if he likes it. if he doesnt he can return it and we can do a custom build. i send it out. the day he gets it i get an email:
" i really hate to say this but there are scratches on the neck,the body is busted where it looks like some one tried to force it on, and the pick up is slanted forward the wood work looks amateur,the intonation is off (thats why we use a compensated bridge,he didnt know that it was adjustable
![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)
sorry for the long reply but im ready to walk off a bridge. shoudl i just give up?
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_e_sad.gif)
![Crying or Very Sad :cry:](./images/smilies/icon_cry.gif)