#1
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Double 'Bucker, Floating Bridge
Set my bridge in the correct position. The bass side of bridge is closer to the p'ups than the treble side by a significant amount when guitar is intonation is spot on.
Ideas? Thanks
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Paully Yamaha FG700S Dread Epiphone Joe Pass Hollowbody Electric Epiphone Les Paul Special 1 p90's Squier Stratocaster SE Yamaha Thr 5 v.2 Amp Behringer Ultracoustic AT-108 Amp Bugera V5 Infinium Amp Bugera 112 TS Cab Peavey PVi 100 Microphone Tascam DR05 Digital Recorder Cubase AI 6 |
#2
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And the problem is???? You can adjust the height of the pickups but, to what end? Obviously the closer to the strings the pickup is the more sound the pickup will generate, so, if the Bass side is closer, you'll get more bass than treble. Only you can decide if that is a good thing or a bad thing.
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Maton CE60D Ibanez Blazer Washburn Taurus T25NMK |
#3
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Hi Pauly, if I understand you correctly I think you need to setup the bridge so that it is level. Once that is set, then you need to adjust the saddles for intonation. It sounds like you have the bridge titled left to right rather than straight?
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#4
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Um, I think he's referring to bridge position on a hollowbody, where sliding backward or forward changes the intonation...
That said, I'll pose two questions here:
If you're using too light a string gauge on a traditional electric jazzbox - where the (wooden) saddle is pre-compensated - you're going to have difficulty from the get-go; with a set of 12's (or heavier), a good setup (meaning fret leveling, nut/bridge slotting, and the old '50s standard lowest action possible - that's how those jazz/rockabilly cats did it back in the day), and a bit of old-fashioned practice, you'll be surprised how quickly you'll adapt - and get a whole lot more tone in the bargain... In the event that neither of the above solve the problem, it's possible that the neck may have shifted/twisted - you'll need to bring it to a tech and have him/her assess the problem; while a twisted neck can often be corrected with a heat press (about $100+/- in my neck of the woods) a reset is going to run into some major bucks, and may not be worth it on something like an Ibanez Artcore or Epiphone Zephyr/ES-175 - but that's a decision only you can make... Hope this helps...
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"Mistaking silence for weakness and contempt for fear is the final, fatal error of a fool" - Sicilian proverb (paraphrased) Last edited by Steve DeRosa; 01-02-2017 at 11:20 AM. Reason: typo |