I'm working on a fretless bass and I have several design constraints that I'm trying to work around.
A: should be light
B: should NOT NOT be a neck-diver
C: should be 34 inch scale
D: Should make use of all the stuff I already have lying around
E: Should be a little different from the fenderish basses I already have
So I've always liked the Turner Model 1 design. It has that San Francisco victorian hippie vibe, but simple and unusual. I want to copy that. Turner makes a Model1 bass, but it's 32 inch scale. I'm used to 34 and would be even more out of tune on 32 than I am on 34 and on my upright bass. Plus I'll bet even at 32 inch scale that Turner bass is a neck-diver.

The body will be pine, the neck will be a soft maple/mahogany laminate with a fingerboard of Ipe. Because I have the wood on hand. Hipshot tuners, side mounted on an open headstock. Wooden bridge.
What I'm thinking is take that Turner design, move the bridge back to where it usually sits on an electric bass, and then shorten the neck by @ four inches, so the scale length is 34 but I only have the equivalent of 15 "frets," a twenty inch neck rather than 24 inches. I've laid it out life size on paper, and it looks like it could be done. A slightly larger body/shorter neck means I can have the neck join the body at about the 12th "fret," and still have a scale length of 34. I don't think I'll miss the high notes--I'm not imagining this as a solo style bass, I'm hoping for woody and a little more hollow body-ish.
I have a nagging feeling I'm missing something though. Maybe the proportions will look grotesque? Any thoughts?