Well, I don't know how old you are Cowboy, but at my age, carrying around a dinner table sized case to a gig three nights a week is a bit much. Besides, if you knew me and how cautious I am with my instruments, you would not question my sanity. I do have to confess many years ago, I did have a 1964 P-Bass that I never really could get the neck straight enough on. One night after a late gig, I leaned my bass in the gig bag up against the bumper of my 4x4 pickup. I went inside and forgot about it in the garage. The next morning I got in the truck and backed out of the garage. Both front and rear tires rolled straight over the entire length of the bass, and as I rolled down the driveway, saw that my bass in the gig bag was laid out like road kill. I unzipped the gig bag and pulled the bass out expecting multiple pieces. I saw that the strings had compressed into the fingerboard all up and down the neck, but nothing was cracked or broken. Then I tried to play it, and to my utter amazement, the action on the bass was perfect and the truss rod was set perfectly for a dead straight neck! It played like a dream from that day on.