#1
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Neck reset advice requested
Hi. About 6 months or so ago I bought on eBay a pretty smashed up Taylor that I was going to make some wall art with. The body was smashed toward the neck on bass side in back. The guy was parting out the good parts so I bought them too. When I received it, I thought, hey, I can fix this and have a 714CE for less than $800. I was successful thanks to some fine Youtube videoes. I got it structurally sound (good as new in my opinion) and it now plays like a dream. I'm no luthier but felt good after this first attempt and saved a fine guitar. I still need to work a little on the cosmetics but that can wait. I just wanted to get it playing again. I just bought a 2021 Gibson J-185 (also eBay) for $1300. It's on its way now. It looks to be in excellent shape but the seller reports it has an underset neck. I have been watching Youtube once again. I think I can handle that too and consider myself handy. I just really enjoyed this luthier stuff. If it does need a neck reset (dove tail), just wondering if anyone would strongly advise to not try this on the Gibson but maybe practice on a cheaper guitar. Your thoughts? I could pay to have it done and still be ahead but I'd like to do it.
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#2
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Have you done any previous dovetail neck resets? If not, I'd advise finding some cheapies to practice on. That J-185 is a potentially very nice guitar, and not(IMHO)the one to try your first reset on.
Welcome to the world of guitar repair!! |
#3
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Thanks Dave. I appreciate the input. No, I haven't. O've installed pickup systems, bridges, replaced frets and a host of other small things but never a dove tail reset. It looks pretty straight forward but I also have seen some videoes where factory surprises were uncovered when the neck was removed. Those are the things I would worry about. Also, the guys making the videoes make it look easy but that isn't always the way things are.
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#4
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Lots of Yamahas need dovetail neck resets and are easy to find and cheap. The OP could practice on those. Somewhere on the net I downloaded someone's instructions with Yamaha's quirks. There is also a market for playable Yamahas.
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#5
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I agree with the other Dave, and would go a step further, even. I've built several guitars and violins, so I'm fairly comfortable around a shop, but neck resets are a whole 'nother ball game. That is one thing I leave to a seasoned pro. Just too many things can go wrong on the removal, even if you do everything right! And shaving the right spots the right amount.....well, that's for the pros also. IMO, that is a skill set acquired only by lots and lots of experience, something a part time guy like me just won't ever acquire. Good luck, whatever your decision. And if you DIY....LOTS of luck!
__________________
Dave F ************* Martins Guilds Gibsons A few others 2020 macbook pro i5 8GB Scarlett 18i20 Reaper 7 |
#6
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+1 on Dave's comments.
None of us is lacking interest and ambition, but speaking for myself, I often find that I've, in my ignorance, have bitten off more than I can chew. |
#7
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Never mind.
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#8
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Quote:
http://yamahavintagefg.com/vintage-y...eset-procedure And Frank Ford's site: http://www.frets.com/FretsPages/pagelist.html#Luthier |
#9
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[QUOTE=redi;7018579]While not a Gibson, this is probably that doc. A lot of good general info that might apply to any reset.
http://yamahavintagefg.com/vintage-y...eset-procedure Yes that is the article with downloadable instructions. |
#10
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Reading the fullness and detail of that Yamaha neck reset doc really makes you want to stick with bolt-on necks (Collings, Taylor, Furch, now Eastman, etc.) and the relative ease of a reset. Or Carbon Fiber, which won't move.
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#11
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Thank you everyone for chiming in. It has been most helpful. I am still undecided. Right now I am looking for a decent luthier in my area and will get a price from them to help me weigh what to do. Otherwise I will probably be posting again so you guys can help me get out of any mess I might create (LOL).
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#12
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Maybe when you’ll get it and find it’s perfectly playable tweaking the saddle.
There’s lots of guitars around that are getting played that could use a neck reset that won’t. |
#13
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$1300 sight unseen for a Gibson J-185 that's in need of a neck reset (?) is quite
a chunk of change, to my mind. |
#14
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Yes, it's a gamble but the pictures and seller reviews were good. Sometimes I just like to throw the dice. The bridge saddle height looks original. Not sure if this link will work for the pic but it might.
https://1drv.ms/u/s!AlWkI9NYbI3Lge0U6yY8MvOvLwNIxg |
#15
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That picture shows a lot of saddle. Maybe it won’t need anything?
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Tags |
714ce, j185, neck, reset |
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