← Back to product|Deep Intelligence Analysis
● Live Data
Lollar P-Bass 90
Lollar · Pickups for 4-String P-Bass

Lollar P-Bass 90

£199.00
Fair Value
1 stores tracked
Buy Signal
Fair Value
Price near historical average — neutral outlook
Confidence: 50/100
RSI (14)
Need 15+ data points
Volatility (ann.)
Need more data
30d Momentum
Need 30+ data points
Price Position
No 90d range data
EMA 20
EMA 50
Need 50+ data points
90d Low / High
£199
High: £199.00
30d Forecast
→ Stable
Store Intelligence
ThomannThomann
£199.00
Buy
Price spread: £0.00 across 1 stores
AI Recommendation EngineRule-based · v1
Fair Value
Price near historical average — neutral outlook
Confidence: 50%
Reasons to Buy
Near 90-day low — historically optimal entry point
Detailed product specifications available — transparent product information
Risks / Watch Out
Currently at or above the 90-day average price
Only 1 store carrying this product — limited price competition
Product Fundamentals
  • Lollar P-Bass 90
  • Hand-Wound Split-Coil Pickup for Electric Bass
  • Position: All positions
  • Output: Medium
  • Cross between a P-Bass and a P90 pickup
  • Compared to a standard P-Bass pickup, the sound is richer and more powerful
  • With an emphasis on the fundamental frequencies of the string and a warmer output signal
  • Great with overdrive or distortion
  • Connection: 2-conductor
  • DC resistance: 12.4 kOhm
  • Colour: Black
  • Made in USA
From Our Partner Storescached 1h
Lollar Pickups Releases DC J-Bass Pickup - Premier Guitar
Premier Guitar· 773d ago
Lollar releases Staple P-90 electric guitar pickup - MusicRadar
MusicRadar· 3559d ago
Lollar sharpens its focus with new Jazzmaster replacement pickup, the Blademaster - Guitar World
Guitar World· 2368d ago
Lollar Pickups - Vintage Guitar® magazine
Vintage Guitar® magazine· 3614d ago
Lollar Pickups Announces New DC-90 Pickup - Music Connection Magazine
Music Connection Magazine· 905d ago
GearDeals Intelligence · Data from 2 historical price points · Analysis is informational only, not financial advice