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Do you set neck relief on your acoustics?
I find that it's critical on electrics to have a little relief to avoid rattles and fret buzz but on a typical acoustic action that is set to achieve a clean full tone with no rattles at all (typically 6 or 7 64ths low E to 5/64th high E), then I find a straight neck with little or no relief to be fine and see little gain in adding relief.
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Comments
There's nothing scary about truss rod adjustments. I just do it by eye, allowing for very slight movement when lightly tapping down on the low-E at the 7th fret whilst simultaneously fretting it at the 1st and 13th frets.
If a new guitar has been properly set-up at the time of purchase, truss-rod adjustment will often be necessary a few months down the line as the guitar settles down. Changing string types and gauges can also create a need for adjustment.
I had a BSG A-Pro where the seller had tried to reduce the high action caused by a high saddle by introducing way excessive negative neck relief. Easily rectified with attention to the saddle height as well as the truss rod, transforming the guitar's playability.
A different story I guess if you want an acoustic to play like an electric with a low action.
I don't like them absolutely dead straight though - firstly because I think you always do need just the smallest amount, but also because it makes it difficult to tell there isn't a back-bow, which is always a problem.
"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 don't need any more than that though, and I've never measured it.
the tap test works for me