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Work Hours
Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM
Learn how electric bass OEM production differs from electric guitar manufacturing, including scale length, neck stability, pickups, hardware, setup, QC, and packaging.

Electric bass OEM production is not simply electric guitar production with a longer neck. Bass guitars have different structural, hardware, setup, and performance requirements. For brands, distributors, importers, and private label buyers, understanding these differences helps reduce product risk and improve communication with the factory.
An electric bass must handle stronger string tension, longer scale length, different balance, bass-specific pickups, heavier bridges, and different player expectations. If a factory treats bass production exactly like standard electric guitar production, the final product may have problems with neck stability, weight balance, action, electronics, or playability.
This article explains what buyers should confirm before starting an electric bass OEM project.
Electric basses usually have longer scale lengths than electric guitars. The neck must be stable enough to handle string tension. Buyers should confirm scale length, neck material, truss rod specification, fingerboard material, and neck profile.
Important details include:
– Scale length
– Neck wood
– Fingerboard material
– Nut width
– Number of frets
– Neck profile
– Truss rod function
Neck stability is one of the most important quality factors for bass guitars.

Bass guitars can feel uncomfortable if body weight and neck balance are not well planned. A bass with neck dive or excessive weight may receive poor customer feedback even if the appearance looks acceptable.
Buyers should discuss body material, body size, strap button position, and hardware weight with the factory. If you are developing a new model, sample review is especially important.
Bass pickups and electronics are different from standard electric guitar components. Buyers should confirm pickup type, pickup position, control layout, active or passive electronics, and output requirements.
Common options include:
– Single-coil bass pickups
– Split-coil bass pickups
– Humbucking bass pickups
– Active electronics
– Passive electronics
– Volume and tone controls
– EQ control layout
Component selection affects tone, cost, and target market.

Bass bridges and tuners are usually heavier and more specific than electric guitar hardware. Buyers should confirm hardware level, color, bridge type, tuner style, knobs, and string compatibility.
Hardware should match both product price level and stability requirements. A low-quality bridge or tuner can create tuning and setup issues.
Like electric guitars, electric basses can be customized with different finishes, colors, logos, and packaging. However, buyers should consider how finish and hardware choices affect visual identity and price.
For private label bass projects, logo placement, headstock design, packaging, and model naming should be confirmed before sample development.
Sample review is critical for bass OEM production. Check appearance, neck stability, body balance, electronics, hardware, string action, intonation, and packaging.
Important sample checks include:
– Neck straightness
– Fretwork
– Balance when held
– Pickup output
– Electronics function
– Bridge adjustment
– Tuning stability
– String action
– Packaging protection
If a bass sample feels unbalanced or difficult to play, revise before bulk production.

Electric bass QC should include both physical and functional inspection. Electronics should be tested, hardware should be checked, and setup should be confirmed.
QC checklist:
– Finish appearance
– Neck and fret inspection
– Electronics testing
– Pickup and control function
– Bridge and tuner checking
– String action and intonation
– Packaging inspection
Bulk bass orders need consistency because professional players and retailers notice setup differences quickly.

Vines Musical supports electric bass OEM and ODM manufacturing for brands, distributors, wholesalers, and professional buyers. We can discuss bass specifications, materials, pickups, electronics, hardware, finish, logo, sample development, QC, and packaging.
Our team can help buyers plan electric bass products for private label, retail, wholesale, and brand product lines.
Is bass production the same as electric guitar production?
No. Bass guitars require different scale length, neck stability, hardware, pickups, balance, and setup.
Can I customize bass pickups and electronics?
Yes. Pickup type, active or passive electronics, control layout, and hardware can be customized.
Why is balance important for bass guitars?
Poor balance can make a bass uncomfortable to play. Body weight, neck length, and hardware all affect balance.
Should I approve a bass sample first?
Yes. Sample review is important before bulk production, especially for neck stability, electronics, and playability.