I've been digging the HERCO Flex 75 lately for bass: the bumpy grip surface is tops!
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Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 3546 mojave desert, california |
I've been digging the HERCO Flex 75 lately for bass: the bumpy grip surface is tops! |
Joined: Jan 09, 2008 Posts: 473 Sackville, New Brunswick |
WetBandit wrote:
Yes. Once in a while I'll grab one of those , or the yellow X-H one. Mostly though, I'm still favouring the Ultex 1.0 mm. It's the only pick I've bought a bag of. The Graphtech TUSQ A3 is almost my second favourite pick. Very stiff but still very thin, and the raised lettering on both sides makes a good grip. A wee bit pointier than a standard. I use these same picks on bass too. Them, or a Brain 1.30 mm, because I like the "cat's tongue" grip. Sometimes though, I'll just look at the pile of picks and say "which one can I find the easiest on an oriental pattern rug?" Using that criteria, the Ultex picks are the hardest to find. —I'm not a complete idiot. Some parts are missing. Last edited: Jul 09, 2015 23:02:16 |
Joined: Jan 09, 2008 Posts: 473 Sackville, New Brunswick |
Ah. Finally found a photo of the flag pick, exactly like the one my sister gave me. I thought it was just a souvenir thing, and I thanked her politely, but by golly, it's one of my top 5 favourite picks. It's about 2.0 mm thick, made of a polycarbonate, I believe. It has an edge beveled like a Dunlop "Big Stubby", but with no depression in the middle, and it's more pointy than the Big Stubby. I'm not a complete idiot. Some parts are missing. Last edited: Jul 15, 2015 22:00:23 |
Joined: Aug 11, 2015 Posts: 1 |
Hooked on these at 16. Unfortunately, they don't make them anymore. |
Joined: Sep 09, 2008 Posts: 3158 Guildford England |
Wow! One year has passed since I bought my gravity pick, it is barely showing any wear and still performing very well. For anyone who is having difficulty holding a pick please read on. Along with all numerous free picks given to me by string traders I started looking for a special pick that might suit my inadequacies. I had gathered around 100 picks before finding The Gravity. They seem to work on the same principle as a glass suction cup, the more your fingers sweat the more suction and grip it produces. For me and my disability the Gravity Pick is the best on Earth, I'm a deadly accurate surf guitar player now! (grin). I'm writing this because a seller mislaid my string order for a week and compensated me by sending a bunch of picks. After only a few seconds of using his picks I was back to playing like a 5 year old again.. Hope this helps someone out there. Last edited: Nov 13, 2015 12:21:50 |
Joined: Sep 09, 2013 Posts: 30 Distrito Federal |
Dunlop tortex .50mm red. www.facebook.com/LosOxidadosWeb —Yelo My band - www.facebook.com/LosOxidadosWeb |
Joined: Oct 08, 2014 Posts: 1073 Northern Ohio |
V-Picks Large Pointed Ultra Lite Ruby Red .8mm – Da Vinci Flinglestein, The Syndicate of Surf on YouTube |
Joined: Jul 04, 2010 Posts: 369 Ottawa |
Has anyone ever tried Fender 451 picks? They are like standard celluloid (351) picks but smaller (apparently closer to a Jazz III pick. I love the sound of heavy Fender celluloid picks. I was playing a Jazz III pick yesterday and it was so easy to play fast with low tension; felt effortless! But it sounded so dull. Maybe the 451 pick will be a good compromise. They seem really hard to find though... — |
Joined: Sep 09, 2008 Posts: 3158 Guildford England |
Syndicateofsurf wrote:
V-Picks are the original acrylic plectrum which Gravity Picks copied and perfected. I have one similar that grips well and performs very smoothly although it only gets used when I can't find my Gravity Razor these days. The Razor if ordered as "Master Class" has a coarsely hand filed edge which gives a kind of gritty slicing action feel. Last edited: Nov 25, 2015 14:05:22 |
Joined: Jul 04, 2010 Posts: 369 Ottawa |
After exhaustive R&D (ahem taking scissors to the picks and sharpening them on carpet) I came up with a sort of celluloid Jazz III. Worked pretty well but I think the stiffness and material of the Jazz III are major factors in the ease of playing. The pick did sound like I wanted it to but after switching back and forth between a normal pick and this one I felt no real improvement. — |
Joined: Feb 26, 2006 Posts: 12159 Seattle |
Just got these made. I've had a lot of picks made this past year... I am probably going to have another batch made with "The 'Verbpire Strikes Back" and "Return of the 'Verbi" mocked up just like the original logos. |
Joined: Jan 28, 2016 Posts: 37 Omaha, NE. |
My choice for picks. Last edited: Jan 28, 2016 15:05:29 |
Joined: Nov 03, 2011 Posts: 660 |
I go back and forth with these too. At times I find a standard fender medium pick to work due to using the picks flexibility for rhythm stuff yet I like the accuracy these Jazz pickups give me. JCStilley wrote:
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Joined: Dec 28, 2015 Posts: 27 Kent, Ohio |
I've been using these CoolPick "CoolCell" 1mm celluloid picks. My hands sweat a lot and either this coating works great or I am having a placebo response to their claims. They really seem to stay in place better. Last edited: Jan 28, 2016 16:03:12 |
Joined: Sep 21, 2009 Posts: 275 Toulouse |
I tried a lot of picks... thick, thin etc... A month ago, I recover an orange Dunlop Nylon one, very old and dirty. I was my one and only pick for almost 10 years when I was student and playing on an acoustic. |
Joined: Feb 14, 2016 Posts: 103 Brighton |
I've been switching between .88 Nylons, Ultex Jazz IIIs and some unknown gauge stainless steel picks by a brand called 'Asbo'. Very unique tone, bright and scratchy. Earth. Atomizer. Let's go. |
Joined: Apr 29, 2010 Posts: 2467 Venice, CA |
My absolute new favorite pick... That notch at the top really does make a difference in being able to adjust positioning on the fly! Not to mention, it helps me feel connected with my teenage roots in music. —Insect Surfers |
Joined: Oct 06, 2008 Posts: 550 So Cal |
I have yet to drop one of these - they wear out before I replace 'em. And as Chet said, with a thumb-pick, you can play with yourself. "Hello Girls!" |
Joined: Nov 16, 2013 Posts: 4536 Wisconsin |
mitchvreed wrote:
Picked up a few of these from the shop the other day for exactly the oppostite reason - my hands get so dry & tips so smooth the pick wants to shift. They make 2 kinds, one has a gritty finish like if you roughed up a pick with a nail file, don't care for it. But these have a different effect and seem to help; especially healing from a splinter in the thumb. Have a couple of the bigger triangle things for wild rhythm & a couple regular size in .8mm, pretty nice. Missing something sound-wise though; they should do a Tortex with this compressible cell stuff on it. —Wes DISCLAIMER: The above is opinion/suggestion only & should not be used for mission planning/navigation, tweaking of instruments, beverage selection, or wardrobe choices. |
Joined: Jan 19, 2015 Posts: 3 |
The new Herco Vintage '66 picks from Dunlop are fantastic, especially when they get worn in. The material is softer than the Flex nylon with a gentle snappy attack that reminds me of spring reverb. |