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http://www.guitarsaddles.com/SaddleShim.asp
Otherwise just get some veneer off cuts from eBay, use a blade and a steel ruler to trim them
I think I'll give him a miss...
Thanks for the info though.
On the OP - I've used rosewood to good effect (I actually had a little block very kindly sent to me by @octatonic after asking a similar question on here....I used all of it otherwise I'd pay it forward to you). This may not be the best way to do it but my approach was to get the shim roughly the right size and then glue it to the bottom of the saddle, and then do the final trimming and sanding with it on there.
i have some ebony you can have if you want.
It probably doesn't make a lot of difference, to be honest! As long as the material is hard enough that it won't actually absorb vibration - and it would need to be as soft as some sort of rubber for that really - then I can't see any reason it should affect the tone. Piezo undersaddle strips don't seem to.
I do think the hardness of the material makes a difference when it's the actual saddle itself, because the strings are pressing directly onto it and that will affect the energy that's passed from the strings down into the bridge, or reflected back into the string vibration - but at the bottom of the saddle, the whole lot is just moving up and down together.
I've used wood, bone, card, plastic and even metal - in fact, I've seen cut-off pieces of wound strings used - and never heard any difference.
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