This article is written by Toru Hoshino, a jazz bassist and instructor based in Japan who teaches online lessons to students worldwide. In this article, he puts a rain cover on his bass case and bikes through the rain for 20 minutes to see if it actually works.
For this one, I put a rain cover on my bass case and biked for 20 minutes in the rain, to test whether the case stayed dry.
Spoiler: the bass came out completely fine. Here’s the full process, from putting the cover on to arriving at the destination.

Contents
Putting the Rain Cover On
Getting set up:

It’s generously sized, so it covers the case with plenty of room to spare: 385(w) x 1220(H) x 70(D) mm.



And off I go.

20 Minutes of Biking in the Rain — Arrived at the Studio
Made it to the studio. The outside is, naturally, soaked.


And on the inside…


Completely dry. Great job, rain cover.
Once You’re Done With It
Once you’re done using it:

Roll it up,

and it packs down small.

Small enough to fit right into your case.

Noah’sark Rain Coat NRC-Bass (Rain Cover for Electric Bass Cases)

(Product description quoted from Amazon — note: the listing says “guitar,” but this is the bass version.)
Find it here: https://amzn.asia/d/85p004l
Sudden rain catches you off guard precisely because you never have a rain cover on hand for it. Well worth having, just to protect an instrument and case you care about.
Update, July 2025
Since writing this, I’ve also tried out a few rain covers from other manufacturers, including some newer brands. All of them had solid water resistance and felt genuinely good to use.
I’ve also covered how they feel in actual use on video, if you’re curious.
Keeping your gear dry is one problem solved — knowing exactly what to work on once you sit down to actually practice is a different one, and that’s exactly where a teacher helps.
Want Personalized Feedback on Your Playing?
This is exactly the kind of thing that’s hard to fix alone — and where having a teacher makes all the difference.
At Line on Bass, I offer an online lesson service where you send me a video of your playing, and I give you specific, detailed feedback — every single day if you want.
Students from around the world are using this to fix exactly these kinds of issues and steadily improve their jazz bass skills.
