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Looking to shave a bit off my saddle... but not sure how far one can go before it's buzz-city. Any advice?
I don't beat the strings very hard... so I guess that means I can have a fairly low action - but I'm not sure if there's some way of measuring how low I can take the saddle.
Thanks.
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Thanks @Sassafras.
Excuse my extreme ignorance... but what's a diamond plate... and where do I get one?
I guess if the break angle becomes too shallow, I'd also have to make some alterations to the bridge?
I use DMT diamond plates, they're just sharpening stones with crystalline diamond coating. I like them because they're perfectly flat, cut quickly and don't wear out. There are other makes, I just happen to have a few of these. Great for sharpening tools in general.
If the break angle gets too shallow you would have to sand down the bridge behind the saddle but I'd try to avoid that.
Thanks... I'll Google them.
... and yes... I see your point about trying to avoid sanding the bridge
Put a capo on at the first fret
Take a set of feeler gauges and measure the gap between the 12th fret and underside the string on both treble and bass strings.
I use imperial gauges that measure in thousandths of an inch.For most purposes unless you are a heavy strummer you want an action of about 78-88 thou on the bass and 60-70 thou on the treble side (with a fairly straight truss rod)
Now anything over those desired heights is the amount you want to lower the strings by
To do this you need to lower the bridge by TWICE that amount
If the resulting saddle gets too low for a decent break angle towards the pins you may need to consider creating a ramp for the strings down into the hole to maintain a decent break angle
Many guitars have a re-sale value. Some you'll never want to sell.
Stockist of: Earvana & Graphtech nuts, Faber Tonepros & Gotoh hardware, Fatcat bridges. Highwood Saddles.
Pickups from BKP, Oil City & Monty's pickups.
Expert guitar repairs and upgrades - fretwork our speciality! www.felineguitars.com. Facebook too!
@FelineGuitars... that's great. Much appreciate your advice. Should the neck be perfectly straight when I'm doing my measurements and my adjustments... or should the neck have the normal amount of relief that I use on that specific guitar?
Also... I'm trying to work out why I'd need to remove twice the measured 'excess'... and not just 1x the measured excess. I'm a bit mathematically challenged on that one!!
its possible to do this by just running the saddle over abrasive paper on a flat surface, although to reliably acheive the flat, straight and square result it's better to put the saddle in a vice and run the abrasive over it.
There is a school of thought especially among American luthiers and repairers that this is of significant importance because it governs the torque applied to the top. Measuring from the underside of the A string to the surface of the top right in front of the bridge, they aim for half an inch.
It's interesting, because I don't think I've ever seen a British luthier ever mention it...but a browse of threads over at UMGF reveals that it's generally seen as being more important than break angle as a thing.
The reason for the TWICE the excess is down to a geometrical thing called "Similar triangles"
Picture that the line of the string , the level along the top of the frets and the height from fret to string make the three sides of a right angle triangle.
The 12th fret is half the distance of the bridge saddle from the nut so if you imagine another such triangle with the bridge as the far end and the line from the nut to the bridge as another side and the string once again as the third, all the distances DOUBLE compared to the above mentioned triangle.
Many guitars have a re-sale value. Some you'll never want to sell.
Stockist of: Earvana & Graphtech nuts, Faber Tonepros & Gotoh hardware, Fatcat bridges. Highwood Saddles.
Pickups from BKP, Oil City & Monty's pickups.
Expert guitar repairs and upgrades - fretwork our speciality! www.felineguitars.com. Facebook too!
@FelineGuitars. Really clear explanation... many thanks for that.
(Now... I feel like a complete dolt! A degree in engineering... and I forgot about similar triangles!!! It must be my advancing years.)
Thanks again.
So I now prefer to use 'one and a half times' as the rule, and test the result before more finely taking some more off if necessary. It does make it a two-stage process, but it avoids having to shim or replace a bridge saddle when you've made it just slightly too low.
"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
@ICBM. Thanks... that all makes perfect sense.
The more I look into this stuff... the more I realise that simple stuff is never simple.
Many guitars have a re-sale value. Some you'll never want to sell.
Stockist of: Earvana & Graphtech nuts, Faber Tonepros & Gotoh hardware, Fatcat bridges. Highwood Saddles.
Pickups from BKP, Oil City & Monty's pickups.
Expert guitar repairs and upgrades - fretwork our speciality! www.felineguitars.com. Facebook too!
Thanks. I guess it depends on stiffness of the top / bracing etc.
"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
If the strings are sky high off the top then lowering will reduce that force for the better.
Many guitars have a re-sale value. Some you'll never want to sell.
Stockist of: Earvana & Graphtech nuts, Faber Tonepros & Gotoh hardware, Fatcat bridges. Highwood Saddles.
Pickups from BKP, Oil City & Monty's pickups.
Expert guitar repairs and upgrades - fretwork our speciality! www.felineguitars.com. Facebook too!