my maton guitar keeps developing a bow in the fretboard
im not sure why but my new maton acoustic keeps getting a bow in the fret board where the fret board meets the body of the guitar
its been back to the manufactuture once but within 2 months i can see it starting again, i think i will ask for a new guitar cause surely you shouldnt have to adjust a guitar every few months. any comments? |
chooka, this has never been a problem with the Maton CW80's I've owned over the past 35 years. Haven't seen it in others either. And I've seen some that have really taken a hiding ! For example the M325 [ same neck as a CW80 ] has been dubbed "The Road Warrior" for it's ability to withstand punishment with bands on tour.
When you say a bow , is it way over about 3mm on the 6th string & 2mm on the 1st at the 10th fret ? Do you live in a climate that changes in humidity rapidly or take your guitar from an air conditioned room to the car on a regular basis ? I agree that Maton should take your guitar back to the factory and give you the VIP treatment if it's changing radically on such a frequent basis without any climatic reason. |
the bow is really a small hump in the frets as you look down the guitar, around about the tenth fret, it doesnt need to be much to make the strings rattle when i strum because the action is already so low, when i sent it back before it was at the stage were i got the same note from about the 8th fret up,
i wondered about the climate changes but there are a few people with guitars where i am and they dont have any trouble |
Sounds like you need to take it back to the dealer. Then should have a Maton approved tech that should be able to sort it out. It's definitely a warranty problem if it's buzzing due to a hump in the fretboard.
Maton of course will stick by the action / string heights they send their guitars out with ie. medium height. For warranty I don't think they like the idea of lowering the action below their specs. |
Maybe you got a bad fretboard going there--a "hump" sure sounds like a defect to me. Get in touch with Maton (or your dealer-again)--should be a warrantee issue. Bummer, though. :(
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Humps mean the neck is set wrong. Cronic problem on old martins and other guitars as well. First thing I check when buying a used martin. One dealer I
know of sends em back immediately when they come in like that. It is not a fretboard issue the fretboard just follows the neck it is a neck issue. They will need to reset the neck to get the hump our permanently. Lots of folk just do a fret job and plane the fretboard insteed but to me a hump means the neck is pitched wrong and needs a set . |
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Frankly, I'm surprised to read it isn't a fretboard issue, but I more or less understand the "physics" behind the post. Just seems to me a hump goes beyond neck issues...but I've been wrong before, and am willing to accept I am on this.
Either way, seems like a warrantee thing. Definitely NOT RIGHT. Keep us posted on your progress with this. (I DID own a guitar once with a fretboard issue--and it was not something neck adjustments corrected. That was a loooong time ago, and I also long ago traded the guitar-so it was my educated guess). In any event, get that sucker fixed!!!! :D |
sorry it took so long but i have now got a new maton em225c , its the same guitar model but i didnt wait to get another with the same custom finish
no reports on what exactly was wrong but there were no problems with replacing it. so now its back to practice, practice, practice..... |
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