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Guitar News Weekly Edition #314 |
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September 13, 2004 |
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GUITAR MAN ACOUSTIC GUITAR TIPS Acoustic Day-to-Day Resource http://www.guitartips.addr.com/ Question: What does a guitar seller mean when he describes a guitar as having "Great neck angle as the action is currently very low with plenty of saddle height left?" Tom Answer: After a guitar is 25 or 30 years old, sometimes the neck starts to slant forward from the constant pull of the strings over the years. Instead of getting a neck reset, a less expensive fix is to lower the saddle, even sometimes making the bridge thinner. This less expensive fix is OK if the luthier knows what he's doing and doesn't make the bridge too thin or make the saddle too low. It's inevitable however that the guitar will eventually need a neck reset which is a very expensive repair. The neck needs to be completely removed from the body and re-angled plus a bunch of other stuff. If the seller states the guitar has, "Great neck angle as the action is currently very low with plenty of saddle height left", that means he's trying to convince you the guitar is not in need of this expensive neck reset repair. I just saw a used guitar the other day in a music store. At first, I was impressed with its playability but after a few seconds I realized the saddle (white part) was barely showing and the bridge (wood part) looked thinner than it ought to. This guitar had definitely had the cheaper fix done, maybe several times. I didn't buy the guitar. Also: If a guitar is hard to play and the bridge measures less than 5/16" thick and/or the saddle measures less than 1/8" tall, the guitar probably needs a neck reset. See my other tip relating to this subject - Tip 82. Gman ( o )==# |
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