Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Problem solving Electric Guitars

By Steven Dean


There are times when a guitar player will face technical screw ups such as a bent neck and poor intonation.

One of the biggest reasons for poor sounding and unplayable guitars is the undeniable fact that the neck is either bent or poorly aligned from the body. This will cause a whole range of issues from fret buzz to poor action to your guitar just being a lot more hard to play than it should be.

Within the guitar neck lies what is ordinarily known as a truss rod, which is critical because over- tightening it causes the neck to bend forwards, while slackening it turns it inwards. To combat this difficulty you need a set of Hex keys, a level or straight edge, and a screw driver. What you need to do is to make certain that the strings are established because the string tension is also a contributory element to the way the neck of the guitar will bend. If you have a neck that's bowing out, you would want to tighten the screw and use your level to determine its precision.

On the flip side, if it is bending inwards, you might want to loosen the screw till the neck is level which may help when it comes to working with your electric guitar kit. Just tread carefully as even the slightest correction will have a large effect on the neck of your guitar.

Lastly, one of the the most important issue guitarists face is poor intonation. This suggests that essentially your guitar has a tuning problem and even though it may play comparatively in tune between the first 5 frets when you explore the higher frets you could start hearing some of your notes sounding a little off. Poor intonation typically requires some restructuring to the bridge saddles. These can be quite different dependent on your guitar of choice but the basics are sometimes the same.

Many of us are threatened when considering any facet of the guitar set up but the truth is changing the intonation is truly very simple and anyone can do it if they research it a little first.




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