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They are high from the factory to allow adjustment to where you want it. Easier to reduce saddle height. Raising height properly means new a saddle.
Lots of fingerpickers and bluegrass players like action pretty high.
Nothing to stop you lowering it though. Sometimes lose something in tone and volume with acoustics though. There is a certain amount of height the strings need to be from the top to give the torque needed to get the top moving. Unfortunately, you will only know you have gone too far with lowering, when it's too late to easily resolve it.
For me it's best to wrestle with a slightly higher action, and ensure tone is preserved.
Both my Taylor Koa Mini and the Cort Adirondack 000 all had very high break angles on the bridge.
I lowered the Cort and it plays fine on 12's
I have left the Taylor at its cheese grater level which is virtually unplayable with 12's and my arthritic hands for more than about 30 mins but I have been loathed to lower it as I know you lose a bit of volume but frankly I worry I will lose the tone it has, which is amazing it just sounds like a really expensive produced guitar sound miked up its with a little of the internal and a decent reverb pluging and it is a very pro studio sound thats sits lovely in a mix.
So if there are any acoustic experts if I bring the bridge down on the Taylor will it screw the tone badly or is it just volume.
regards jez
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
a big difference in tone or volume, guitars are 1989 Sigma 12 string and Guild JF65 6 string.
Could the importance of break angle be overstated?
I must admit the high action of seemingly every acoustic I see in a shop just puts me off having a go or enquiring further.
I don't see why guitar companies just can't set them at recommended levels, and they don't the shops could.
If I sold or made guitars I'd want them as playable in the shop as possible.
On older guitars, where string tension has caused the action to become too high (sometimes due to the top bellying excessively - sometimes due to deformation of the soundbox over time) - it is common to see the saddle lowered dramatically. Sometimes the top of the bridge is planed to facilitate this. Beyond a certain point - this is always a bodge - volume is inevitably compromised as a result.
The only ‘correct’ fix is to reset the angle of the neck, to allow bridge height to be maintained, while allowing a playable action. I follow Norm’s Rare Guitars on Instagram. They posted a picture the other day of four vintage Martins in their workshop with their necks off - all were having resets.
But...the chances are if it’s low then your other key geometry could be off too, namely string height off the top, so break angle has become something of a shorthand for all of that.
I’m not a habitual guitar shop tryer-outer but my experiences tend to be that there are some manufacturers that do go for in-store playability (like Taylor and L’arrivee) and others that don’t bother so much (namely Martin and Gibson).
As a buyer, knowing that you’re going to need a proper set up in the first year anyway once the top has settled into its belly, I’m probably quite content that a needless set up hasn’t been included in the costs of the guitar.
There are notable exceptions, but generally set ups done by the retailer aren’t the best when it comes to acoustics. I dread to think what most retailers’ idea of a “this’ll make this guitar sell” set up might be...action too low at the saddle, probably too much relief so even cack handed suitors don’t get buzzes etc.
It would be possible to make them more accurately at the factory, but they would most likely still not be right once they've been in a shop for a few weeks or months having been in a shipping container and a warehouse on the way.
It's true that the shops should probably be setting them up better, but many don't want to alter a new instrument until a customer wants to buy it - they can quite easily move again, and in any case different customers like different set-ups. Any shop that won't set up a guitar properly as the buyer wants at the point of sale isn't doing their job though.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
It's normal to leave the bridge saddle too high from the factory exactly because it is much easier to lower it than raise it.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
I'm sad to say I've only ever had poor experiences of getting acoustic work done by stores in-house people, even very well respected ones. Their experience tends to be shaped by getting lower end electro-acoustics to play more like electrics and they really don't spend a lot of time thinking about how what they are doing affects the acoustic potential of the instrument. That's fine for a lot of players, by the way - exactly what they want in many cases so it's not really a dig at the people doing the work. But it's a bit more nuanced than that.
Finally if you have arthritic hands then you really must purchase a set of Newtone Heritage strings - they are low tension strings
https://www.newtonestrings.com/shop/heritage-series-acoustic-6-string/
My acoustic is a Taylor and is definitely set up on the high side. It hadn't occurred to me that lowering the action might impact on tone so the advice on here is great. Also clear that you can't just hand your acoustic guitar over to any old tech.
http://www.markwillmottguitars.com/
info@markwillmottguitars.com
His website is a mess but I know lots of people from the Wycombe area who swear by his work.
Also, not a million miles away in Oxford is Dave Smart of Smart Guitars. He's done work for me that I've been happy with.