1962 Fender Precision Bass
The 1962 Precision Bass — split-coil era. The bass guitar that revolutionized popular music.
Current Market Value
* Prices are estimates based on recent market data. Actual value depends on originality, condition, and provenance. Pricing methodology
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Specifications
| Body Wood | Alder (contoured body) or Ash |
| Neck Wood | Maple |
| Fingerboard | Brazilian Rosewood |
| Scale Length | 34.000" |
| Frets | 20 |
| Pickup Config | HH |
| Bridge | Four-saddle bridge |
| Tuners | Kluson Deluxe bass |
| Finish Options | Sunburst, Blonde, Custom colors |
| Est. Production | 4,000 |
Pickups & Electronics
Split single-coil (hum-cancelling) pickup — the definitive P-Bass sound.
What Changed in 1962
Pre-CBS P-Bass. The instrument that powered Motown, rock, and country bass.
Collector's Notes
Pre-CBS P-Basses are the gold standard. Many heavily played — full originality is rare and commands premium.
How to Authenticate a 1962 Fender Precision Bass
The 1962 Precision Bass features the split-coil pickup and contoured body with Brazilian rosewood (slab through 1962, veneer after) fingerboard. Pre-CBS quality throughout. These are the P-Basses that defined recorded popular music — Motown, rock, country, and soul all relied on the P-Bass sound. Serial numbers on the neck plate (four or five digits, no letter prefix). For 1962, numbers should fall within documented Fender serial ranges. However, neck plates were not assigned sequentially to bodies, so neck date stamps (pencil or ink on the neck heel) and body cavity dates are more reliable. Look for a hand-written date on the butt end of the neck heel and in the neck pocket or under the pickguard on the body. Split-coil pickup should be original — check for correct bobbin materials and winding style. Pot codes should correspond to 1962. Kluson Deluxe bass tuners. Four-saddle chrome bridge. Brazilian rosewood fingerboard — verify the dark, richly figured wood characteristic of Brazilian (not the lighter, more uniform Indian rosewood). Serial number on neck plate. Cloth wiring. Check neck date stamp on heel. The finish should be nitrocellulose lacquer. Nitro finishes check (develop fine cracks) and wear naturally over decades, showing wood underneath at contact points. The aging pattern should be consistent — even checking across the body, not localized. Refinished guitars often have a 'too perfect' look or inconsistent wear. Under UV/blacklight, original nitro fluoresces differently than modern polyester or polyurethane. Original custom color finishes are verified by examining the color in the pickup cavities and under the pickguard where it has been protected from light. P-Basses see extremely heavy player use — many have had extensive modifications over decades of professional service. Replaced pickups, tuners, bridges, nuts, frets, and pickguards are all common. A 'fully original' pre-CBS P-Bass is rare and commands a significant premium. Check for filled screw holes, enlarged tuner holes, and re-routed pickup cavities. Refinished bodies are very common. Pre-CBS P-Basses share the fundamental split-coil design. Key transitions: rosewood fingerboard (1959), slab-to-veneer rosewood (1962), L-series serials (1963). The 1962 shares most specifications with adjacent years. The CBS acquisition in 1965 creates the next value boundary.